Ancyromonas sigmoides, Kent, 1880

Aydin, Esra Elif & Lee, Won Je, 2022, Free-living Heterotrophic Flagellates Lakes in Turkey (Protista) from Two Hypersaline, Acta Protozoologica 61, pp. 85-98 : 94

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.4467/16890027AP.22.008.17111

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11152121

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AF4987FE-FF9A-0337-8381-E681FB764B2B

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Ancyromonas sigmoides
status

 

Ancyromonas sigmoides Kent 1880 ( Figs 2a View Fig , 3a View Fig )

Cells are 3–5 µm long, oval shaped and dorsoventrally flattened. The thin anterior flagellum is emerging from an anterior depression and is beating slowly. The non-acronematic trailing posterior flagellum is about 1.5 times the cell length. The cells move by gliding. Description is based on the observations of 19 cells. Occurance: every month at Acı Lake, temperature 1–23.5 °C, salinity 24–67.5 psu, dissolved oxygen 3.75–13.2 mg /L.

Remarks: Detailed studies of the genus Ancyromonas were published by two separate groups ( Cavalier-Smith et al. 2008; Heiss et al. 2010, 2011). According to the work of Heiss et al. (2010), Planomonas Cavalier-Smith et al. 2008 has been concluded as a junior synonym of Ancyromonas . According to the previous studies ( Heiss et al. 2010, 2011; Lee 2015), the genus Ancyromonas consists of 6 nominal marine ( A. sigmoides , A. cephalopora , A. impulusive , A. melba , A. sinistra , A. micra ) and 2 nominal freshwater ( A. howeae , A. limna ) species. When compared to Ancyromonas sigmoides , A. melba is larger, A. sinistra has a margin with the presumptive extrusomes and having a flatter cell body. Ancyromonas micra has a thicker anterior flagellum and a bigger rostrum, whereas A. howeae and A. limna have a contractile vacuole. As mentioned by Aydın and Lee (2012) due to their morphological similarities, Ancyromonas micra might have been reported elsewhere under the name of A. sigmoides . Ancyromonas sigmoides is similar to Metopion fluens , but is distinguished by the anteriorly directed flagellum. In addition, the second flagellum of M. fluens is thicker and is directed to the rear. This species has a worldwide distribution.

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