Chaenea sinica, Fan & Xu & Gu & Li & Al-Farraj & Al-Rasheid & Hu, 2015

Fan, Xinpeng, Xu, Yuan, Gu, Fukang, Li, Jiqiu, Al-Farraj, Saleh A., Al-Rasheid, Khaled A. S. & Hu, Xiaozhong, 2015, Morphology of Two Novel Species of Chaenea (Ciliophora, Litostomatea): Chaenea paucistriata spec. nov. and C. sinica spec. nov., Acta Protozoologica 54 (2), pp. 97-106 : 102-103

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.4467/16890027AP.15.008.2733

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12637880

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E75D87A8-6064-FFC9-2151-3A9480C2F83E

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Chaenea sinica
status

sp. nov.

Chaenea sinica spec. nov. ( Figs 4 View Figs 4 , 5 View Figs 5 ; Table 1)

Diagnosis: Extended cell size in vivo usually about 200 × 20 µm. On average 19 somatic kineties. Dorsal brush rows 1–4 consisting of 3–7, 10 or 11, 11–13, and 3–6 dikinetids, respectively. About 71–164 macronuclei.

Type locality: Coastal waters of Bohai Bay (37°37’N, 121°22’E), China GoogleMaps .

Type material: A protargol slide containing the holotype specimen marked with an ink circle has been deposited in the Laboratory of Protozoology , Ocean University of China (Registry no. WYG2006032701) .

Etymology: The species-group name sinicus, -a, -um [m, f, n] reflects the fact that this organism was discovered in China.

Description: Extended cell size about 140–240 × 14–25 µm in vivo, with a length:width ratio of about 10–13:1; cell flexible and contractile; anterior body portion slightly narrowed and posterior part rounded ( Figs 4A, C View Figs 4 , 5A–E View Figs 5 ). Oral bulge inconspicuous ( Fig. 5A–C View Figs 5 ). 71–164 ellipsoid macronuclei, with size about 2–4 × 1–2 µm, scattered in cytoplasm ( Figs 4F View Figs 4 , 5N View Figs 5 ). Single contractile vacuole located at the posterior body end ( Figs 4A, C View Figs 4 , 5B View Figs 5 ). Extrusomes rod-like, about 6–8 µm long, attached in batches to oral bulge, and scattered in cell ( Figs 4A, C View Figs 4 , 5F, G View Figs 5 ); extruded ones can be observed outside oral bulge, about 12–16 µm long ( Figs 4F View Figs 4 , 5L View Figs 5 ). Cortex flexible with distinct furrows present in some contracted specimens ( Fig. 5E View Figs 5 ). Cell colour greyish due to packed food vacuoles, ca. 10 µm in diameter, and cytoplasmic granules, ellipsoid or round, ca. 1–4 µm in diameter ( Figs 4A, C View Figs 4 , 5C View Figs 5 ). Movement by slowly crawling on bottom of Petri dish, with anterior body portion continually contracting. 17–21 somatic kineties mainly consisting of monokinetids and extending the entire body length, each of which consists of 6–9 narrowly spaced oralized somatic monokinetids and 89–188 ordinarily spaced somatic monokinetids ( Figs 4D, E View Figs 4 , 5H–K View Figs 5 ). Somatic cilia about 5–6 µm long ( Fig. 5D View Figs 5 ). Four dorsal brush rows consisting of 3–7, 10 or 11, 11–13, and 3–6 dikinetids respectively ( Figs 4B View Figs 4 , 5H–J View Figs 5 ). Cilia of dorsal brush undetectable in living cells, but observable in protargol stained specimens and about 2.5 µm long ( Figs 4B View Figs 4 , 5H–J, M View Figs 5 ). Circumoral kinety inconspicuous, composed of dikinetids which are at anterior end of each somatic kinety ( Figs 4D, E View Figs 4 , 5I View Figs 5 ). Nematodesmata, which can be observed after protargol staining, arising from circumoral kinety ( Figs 4F View Figs 4 , 5I View Figs 5 ).

Comparison: Considering the cell size, the number of macronuclei and somatic kineties, Chaenea sinica spec. nov. can be distinguished from most congeners. But, Chaenea sp. sensu Petz et al., (1995) and Chaenea robusta Kahl, 1930 need to be compared with our new species.

Although no information regarding its living cell is available, Chaenea sp. sensu Petz et al. (1995) still differs from the new form in possessing longer extrusomes (12–15 µm vs. 6–8 µm) and more dikinetids, in particular in the dorsal brush rows (22–28, 25–30, 25–32, 24–29 vs. 3–7, 10 or 11, 11–13, 3–6). These two species can therefore be separated ( Figs 3G, H View Figs 3 ; Table 2; Petz et al. 1995).

Chaenea robusta can be distinguished from the new species by having: (1) a longer body (300–400 µm vs. 140–240 µm), (2) longer dorsal brush cilia (8 µm vs. ca. 2.5 µm) and extrusomes (12–15 µm vs. 6–8 µm), and (3) fewer somatic kineties (about 15 vs. 19 on average) ( Fig. 3F View Figs 3 ; Table 2; Kahl 1930).

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