Volume 46, Issue 5 pp. 458-463
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Apical Feeding in the Karyorelictids (Protozoa, Ciliophora) Sultanophrys arabica and Tracheloraphis sp.

KHALED A. S. AL-RASHEID

KHALED A. S. AL-RASHEID

King Saud University, Zoology Department, P.O. Box 245.5, Riyadh 11451, Saudi Arabia

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WILHELM FOISSNER

Corresponding Author

WILHELM FOISSNER

Universität Salzburg, Institut für Zoologie, Hellbrunnerstrasse 34, A-5020 Salzburg, Austria

Corresponding Author: W. Foissner—Telephone number: +43(0)662 8044-5615; FAX number: +43(0)662 8044-5698Search for more papers by this author
First published: 14 May 2007
Citations: 12

ABSTRACT

Sultanophrys arabica and Tracheloraphis sp., two interstitial karyorelictid ciliates, were cultivated in sealed 100–200 ml glass bottles half-filled with filtered interstitial water to which some millilitres of the natural organism community and a couple of wheat grains were added. Removing sand grains and sealing the bottles were crucial to achieve a low oxygen tension milieu, which was maintained by the algae contained in the community. This cultivation method provided, for the first time, rich cultures with many feeding, dividing, and conjugating cells. Both species were omnivorous and fed through the apical end, where a well-developed oral apparatus is present. Apical feeding was documented by micrographs of living specimens and by scanning electron microscopy of preserved cells.

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