Eupotes balteatus ( Dujardin, 1841 ) Kahl, 1932

Pan, Ying, Li, Liqiong, Shao, Chen, Hu, Xiaozhong, Ma, Honggang, Alrasheid, Khaled A. S. & Warren, Alan, 2012, Morphology and Ontogenesis of a Marine Ciliate, Euplotes balteatus (Dujardin, 1841) Kahl, 1932 (Ciliophora, Euplotida) and Definition of Euplotes wilberti nov. spec., Acta Protozoologica 51 (1), pp. 29-38 : 30-33

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.4467/16890027AP.12.003.0386

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C16BC273-FF9B-9832-6D04-FE3734B15F50

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Eupotes balteatus ( Dujardin, 1841 ) Kahl, 1932
status

 

Eupotes balteatus ( Dujardin, 1841) Kahl, 1932 ( Figs 1A–P View Fig , 2A–F View Fig ; Table 1)

Improved diagnosis: Small to medium-sized marine Euplotes , 30–80 µm × 20–60 µm in vivo; buccal field about 2/3 of cell length, with about 35 adoral membranelles; constantly 10 frontoventral, five transverse, two caudal and two widely separated left marginal cirri; eight dorsal kineties with about 15 dikinetids in mid-dorsal rows. Dorsal silverline system doubleeurystomus type.

Morphological description of Qingdao population: Body size highly variable, usually 30–80 µm × 20–60 µm in vivo ( Table 1; Fig. 1A–D, L View Fig ). Body generally broadly oval in outline, sometimes with a narrow anterior end. Both margins smooth except for a small projection at the right anterior end. Dorsoventrally highly flattened, ventral side somewhat concave, dorsal side convex, without distinct ridges or grooves ( Fig. 1N View Fig ). Each dorsal cilium surrounded by 7 to 9 ellipsoid granules forming a rosette beneath the pellicle ( Fig. 1F, M View Fig ). Cytoplasm colorless, usually with numerous crystals and food vacuoles of different sizes making cell appear opaque or dark gray in vivo ( Fig. 1A–C, L View Fig ). Macronucleus generally C-shaped, somewhat variable among individuals ( Fig. 1J, P View Fig ). Micronucleus oval, usually attached to mid-region of macronucleus ( Fig. 1P View Fig ).

Adoral zone approximately 55–85% of the body length, composed of 28–43 membranelles, the bases of which are up to 8–10 µm in length. Paroral membrane thin and long, lying parallel to main body axis and to the right of the posterior portion of the adoral zone of membranelles (AZM). Contractile vacuole about 8 µm in diameter, located posteriorly near the right body margin ( Fig. 1C, L View Fig ).

Locomotion typically by moderately fast crawling or incessant jerking on substrate. Most active when near dense growths of bacteria.

Cirri on the ventral side relatively fine with cilia about 14 µm long in vivo ( Fig. 1A, D, L View Fig ). Constantly ten frontoventral cirri (FVC), among which cirrus VI/2 is nearer to cirrus V/2 than to cirrus V/3, the other seven frontoventral cirri located in frontal area of body ( Fig. 1K, O View Fig ). Constantly five strong transverse cirri, cilia of which are about 30 µm long; cirrus VI/1 is located slightly higher than cirrus II/1 ( Fig. 1K, O View Fig ). Two fine, widely separated marginal cirri. Anterior marginal cirrus and leftmost transverse cirrus located at about the same level ( Fig. 1K, O View Fig ). Two fine caudal cirri ( Fig. 1O View Fig ). Invariably eight dorsal kineties that extend entire length of body. First and last dorsal kineties usually positioned near the edge on the ventral side, the middle ones consist of 12–16 dikinetids ( Fig. 1O, P View Fig ).

Dorsal silverline system irregular double- eurystomus type, i.e. distances from the silverline to both neighboring ciliary rows about equal ( Figs 1H View Fig , 4F View Fig ) with moderately dense silverline grids on ventral side ( Figs 1I View Fig , 4E View Fig ).

Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF