Thecal Plates (thecal + plate)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


PREY SPECIFICITY AND FEEDING OF THE THECATE MIXOTROPHIC DINOFLAGELLATE FRAGILIDIUM DUPLOCAMPANAEFORME,

JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY, Issue 3 2010
Myung Gil Park
In summer to autumn of 2008, a recently described thecate mixotrophic dinoflagellate, Fragilidium duplocampanaeforme Nézan et Chomérat, occurred in Masan Bay, Korea, where it frequently contained bright-orange fluorescent inclusions. Using cultures of F. duplocampanaeforme isolated from Masan Bay, we investigated feeding, digestion, and prey specificity of this mixotroph. F. duplocampanaeforme fed exclusively on Dinophysis spp. when offered a variety of prey including dinoflagellates, a raphidophyte, a cryptophyte, a ciliate, and diatoms separately. In addition, F. duplocampanaeforme had allelopathic effects on other organisms, including cell immobilization/motility decrease (in Dinophysis acuminata, D. caudata, D. fortii, D. infundibulus, Gonyaulax polygramma, Heterocapsa triquetra, and Prorocentrum triestinum), breaking of cell chains (in Cochlodinium polykrikoides), cell death (in Prorocentrum minimum), and temporary cyst formation (in Scrippsiella trochoidea). F. duplocampanaeforme engulfed whole Dinophysis cells through the sulcus. About 1 h after ingestion, F. duplocampanaeforme became immobile and shed all thecal plates. The ecdysal cyst persisted for ,7 h, during which the ingested prey was gradually digested. These observations suggest that F. duplocampanaeforme may play an important role in the Dinophysis population dynamics in the field. [source]


Development of the cell covering in the dinoflagellate Scrippsiella hexapraecingula (Peridiniales, Dinophyceae)

PHYCOLOGICAL RESEARCH, Issue 3 2001
Satoko Sekida
SUMMARY The organization and development of cell coverings in two alternate phases of the life cycle in a marine dinoflagellate, Scrippsiella hexapraecingula Horiguchi et Chihara, were investigated by thin sectioning and freeze-fracture electron microscopy. In one of these phases, the motile phase, cells have an outermost plasma membrane that is lined with flattened amphiesmal vesicles. Groups of microtubules lie beneath these vesicles. In mature motile cells, thecal plates are completely enclosed in individual amphiesmal vesicles. After settling, the cells enter the second, non-motile phase. Here, ecdysis occurs, resulting in several steps including formation of the first pellicle layer (PI), fusion of the inner amphiesmal vesicle membranes to form the new plasma membrane, deposition of the second pellicle layer (PM) under PI, and the appearance and fusion of juvenile amphiesmal vesicles to form new territories, which eventually give rise to new thecal plates in the next motile phase. Thus, the pattern in which thecal plates are arranged in motile cells is determined at the time when the amphiesmal vesicles develop into non-motile cells. [source]


A Marine Dinoflagellate, Amphidinium eilatiensis n. sp., from the Benthos of a Mariculture Sedimentation Pond in Eilat, Israel

THE JOURNAL OF EUKARYOTIC MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 6 2003
JOHN J. LEE
ABSTRACT. A species of Amphidinium bloomed in a mariculture sedimentation pond that was used to grow bivalves near the Gulf of Eilat, Israel. Its overall length averaged 13 ,m, the hypocone was 11 ,m, and its width was 8,m. It has a ventral ridge. The sulcus begins at the longitudinal flagellar pore and does not project forward in the apex toward the transverse flagellar pore and left margin of the cingulum. The sulcus is a very shallow groove that projects variably about a third of the body length toward the antapex. The cingulum is a deep groove as it circles the cell from the left ventral side to the dorsal side and then becomes very shallow on the right ventral side as it arches posterior toward the longitudinal flagellar pore. Using a modified method for studying dinoflagellate chromosomes in the SEM, we observed 31 chromosomes. The plastid is dorsal and peripheral with 6 ventrally projecting peripheral digital lobes that wrap around the sides of the ventral and posterior nucleus. Amphidinium eilatiensis n. sp. is morphologically closest to Amphidinium carterae and Amphidinium rhynchocephalum, but it does not have the obvious thecal plates or polygonal units described for the former species. Instead, it has a series of spicules, bumps, and ridges on its surface. It differs from A. rhynchocephalum by two morphological characters: surface morphology and gross plastid architecture. The amplified fragments of the rDNA from A. eilatiensis n. sp. isolated from 2 separate sedimentation ponds in Eilat include the 3,-end of the SSU rDNA (about 100 nt), the whole ITS region (ITS1 + 5. 8S + ITS2) and the 5,-end of the LSU rDNA (about 900 nts). The total length of the sequences ranged from 1,460 nt. (A. eilatiensis isolate #1) to 1,461 nts. (A. eilatiensis isolate #2). The latter sequences are identical, the difference in length being due to three insertions. Amphidinium eilatiensis is genetically more closely related to A. carterae than to A. klebsii, with respectively 2. 36% and 6. 93% of sequence divergence. [source]