Euplotes balteatus (Dujardin, 1841) Kahl, 1932
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.4467/16890027AP.12.003.0386 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C16BC273-FF9F-9830-6D04-FED3353359A7 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Euplotes balteatus |
status |
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Euplotes balteatus View in CoL
Comparison with other populations: In spite of the variability of its body shape and size, the high stability of the dorsal silverline system pattern, ventral infraciliature, and dorsal structure in vivo are important characters for the identification of Euplotes balteatus ( Tuffrau 1960, Curds1975, Song and Wilbert 2002, Jiang et al. 2010c). The China population corresponds closely with the populations studied previously in terms of its body shape, appearance of adoral zone of membranelles, ventral ciliature, double- eurystomus type silverline system and marine habitat ( Kahl 1932, Tuffrau 1964, Curds 1975). It differs slightly, however, in body size in vivo (<80 µm long vs.> 100 µm long) and the number of dikinetids of the mid-dorsal rows (ca. 15 vs. ca. 20). These, however, are regarded as populationlevel differences; hence its identity as E. balteatus is not in doubt ( Fig. 4A–C View Fig ).
Comparison with similar congeners from the same location: Four similar (small sized, ovoid body shaped) Euplotes species have been reported from the coastal waters of Qingdao in addition to E. balteatus , namely E. minuta Yocum, 1930 , E. parabalteatus Jiang et al., 2010 , E. orientalis Jiang et al., 2010 and E. raikovi Agamaliev, 1966 . E. minuta and E. raikovi can be easily separated from E. balteatus by the type of silverline system and the number of frontoventral cirri ( Fig. 5A–E, P–R View Fig ). Disparities between E. balteatus and E. parabalteatus include: 1) the number of dorsal kineties (8 vs. 6–7); 2) the number of adoral membranelles (28– 43 vs. 19–23); 3) the shape of macronucleus (C-shaped vs. slightly curved rod shaped); 4) the arrangement of frontoventral cirri (V/2 close to V/3 vs. V/2 close to VI/2) ( Fig. 5F–J View Fig ). E. orientalis is distinguished from E. balteatus in having two reduced cirri (IV/2 and V/2) each composed of single dikinetids (vs. two normalsized cirri in E. balteatus ) ( Fig. 5K–O View Fig ).
Morphogenesis: Five types of morphogenesis pattern have been recorded in Euplotes based on the segmentation pattern of the frontoventral transverse cirral anlagen, the absence/presence of reduced cirri and the migration of frontoventral cirri during the ontogenesis process; these are the affinis - type, the eurystomus - type, the charon - type, the raikovi - type, and the orientalis - type ( Curds 1975, Voss 1989, Wang and Song 1995, Martín-González et al. 1998). E. balteatus can be assigned to the charon - type, that is the frontoventral and transverse cirri are formed following the pattern 3:3:3:3:2. Based on the mode of formation of the caudal cirri, Euplotes can be divided into three further types: focardii - type, vannus - type and charon - type ( Serrano et al. 1992, Ma et al. 2008, Jiang et al. 2010c). E. balteatus belongs to the focardii - type in which a caudal cirrus is formed posterior to each of the rightmost two dorsal kineties/DKA in both dividers, hence the number of caudal cirri is constant ( Shao et al. 2010).
One noteworthy feature in the morphogenesis of E. balteatus is that it commences with the dedifferentiation of basal bodies in the mid-region of each dorsal kinety. These basal bodies proliferate to form sparsely distributed elementary anlagen, which then break apart and extend towards the both directions from the fraction spot along the longitudinal axis. These findings are consistent with those of Shao et al. (2010) who noted that the dorsal kineties in E. charon develop in an atypical primary mode.
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