Euplotes rariseta Curds et al., 1974

Wilbert, Norbert & Song, Weibo, 2008, A further study on littoral ciliates (Protozoa, Ciliophora) near King George Island, Antarctica, with description of a new genus and seven new species, Journal of Natural History 42 (13 - 14), pp. 979-1012 : 1002

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222930701877540

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B587B3-FF99-C456-FE78-604BFE26F942

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Euplotes rariseta Curds et al., 1974
status

 

Euplotes rariseta Curds et al., 1974 View in CoL

( Figures 13I–N View Figure 13 ; Table 4)

This extremely small organism was redefined by Song and Packroff (1997) based on a Chinese population. The Antarctic sample corresponds quite well to that redescription.

Description

25–40 Mm in vivo, but mostly about 30 Mm long after protargol impregnation, consistently oval in shape with relatively long cilia in all ciliary organelles. Buccal field about two-thirds of body length; adoral zone evenly curverd with about 20 adoral membranelles ( Figures 13I, M View Figure 13 ). All cirri comparatively weak, 10 frontoventral, five densely arranged transverse and two caudal cirri; invariably (and uniquely) one marginal cirrus ( Figures 13I, M View Figure 13 , arrows). Dorsolaterally mostly seven (7–8) kineties, of which the mid-rows have approximally only 6–7 dikinetids, hence are loosely ciliated ( Figure 13J View Figure 13 ). Macronucleus quite variably shaped.

Remarks

This organism differs from the similar congener Euplotes balteatus in its smaller size ( Table 4), relatively weaker cirri, lower number of membranelles (17–21 versus 27– 33), consistently single marginal cirrus (versus two in the latter) and different pattern of silverline system on dorsal side (double- patella type versus double- eurystomus type) ( Song and Packroff, 1997; Song and Wilbert, 2002a). In addition, unlike E. balteatus , the five transverse cirri in E. rariseta are not only comparatively less strong but also conspicuously closely spaced ( Figures 13K–M View Figure 13 versus A). The morphotype described in 1995 by Petz, Song and Wilbert under the name of E. rariseta should be regarded as a misidentification, and is now believed to be a Euplotes petzi (see above). The two forms can be separated at both morphological and morphometric levels ( Table 4).

Euplotes vannus (Mueller, 1786)

( Figures 3B, C View Figure 3 , 10F View Figure 10 )

Only a few specimens were found from the protargol-impregnated slides. All morphological features correspond perfectly to the populations found from other geographic sites ( Figures 3B, C View Figure 3 ): the size (c. 80–100 Mm), the ciliature pattern, the sharply bending, hook-like posterior part of adoral zone, the characteristic three caudal cirri and the number of dorsal kineties (10–11) (see also Song and Packroff 1997).

As far as the authors know, this is the first time this species has been identified from the Antarctic region.

Kingdom

Chromista

Phylum

Ciliophora

Class

Hypotrichea

Order

Euplotida

Family

Euplotidae

Genus

Euplotes

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