Belonocystis tubistella Rainer, 1968
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.4467/16890027AP.12.002.0385 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038487C2-FFD6-4C30-FCE7-FBECFEE63BD3 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Belonocystis tubistella Rainer, 1968 |
status |
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Belonocystis tubistella Rainer, 1968 ; Figs 1a–d View Fig , 2a–h View Fig
Cells were spherical, 8–16 µm in diameter and moved slowly among the detritus of the microscopic preparation, facilitated by their fine filopodia ( Fig. 1a View Fig ) which were difficult to see, even with high magnification phase-contrast microscopy. Cells contained an eccentrically located nucleus of about 4 µm in diameter with a prominent nucleolus ( Fig. 1a, b, d View Fig ). From one to four functional contractile vacuoles were present, ranging in size up to about 4 µm in diameter, with size apparently dependent upon the stage of the diastolesystole cycle.
The most distinctive feature of these cells was the radiating series of spines with their broad tent-shaped bases ( Fig. 1 View Fig ). Spines were 10–15 µm long, consisting of a hollow shaft that was widest (0.1–0.3 µm diameter) near the base and tapered to a very fine distal point ( Fig. 2a–c View Fig ). The bases of the shafts were divided into four curved arms that formed a basal tent-like structure covered by a membranous sheet that was perforated with circular to elliptical pores in close proximity forming a mesh-work appearance to the spine bases ( Fig. 2e, g, h View Fig ). In the living, uncollapsed state, the top portion of the spine base appeared funnel-shaped with sloping sides that abruptly straightened to nearly parallel sides where scale bases abutted one another ( Figs 1a, b View Fig , 2d View Fig ). Scale bases were 2–3 µm wide and pores in the sheet mesh-work structure forming the bases were 0.1–0.3 µm in diameter.
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