An overview of Suctorian ciliates (Ciliophora, Suctorea) as epibionts of halacarid mites (Acari, Halacaridae)
Author
Dovgal, Igor
Author
Chatterjee, Tapas
Author
Ingole, Baban
text
Zootaxa
2008
1810
60
68
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.182778
48552988-bafb-4ead-a2f3-ac2a0cd12125
1175-5326
182778
Praethecacineta halacari
(
Schulz, 1933
)
, charact. emend
(
Fig. 4, 5
,
9
–11)
=
Thecacineta halacari
Schulz, 1933
=
Lissacineta
allgeni
Jankowski, 1981
,
syn. n.
=
Thecacineta allgeni
(
Jankowski, 1981
)
,
syn. n.
Diagnosis:
Marine suctorians with stylotheca. Cell body, slightly, laterally flattened, entirely filling the lorica and attached to its posterior margin. Apical part of the body narrowed.
FIGSURES 1–2.
Limnoricus ceter
Jankowski, 1981
from halacarid mite (2—stalk) (after
Jankowski 1981
).
FIGURE 3.
Limnoricus ceter
from isopode crustacean (after
Jankowski 1981
).
FIGURES 4–5.
Praethecacineta halacari
(Schulz, 1933)
(after Schulz 1933).
FIGURE 6.
Thecacineta calix
(Schroder, 1907)
(after Matthes 1956). Scale bar 50 µm.
FIGURE 7.
Acineta sulcata
Dons, 1927
from Barents Sea halacarid mites (after Jankowski 1981).
FIGURE 8.
Acineta sulcata
Dons, 1927
from freshwater halacarid mite found in Unava river (orig.). Scale bar 10 µm.
Tentacles placed at upper cell surface. Macronucleus spherical, posteriorly located. Contractile vacuole single. Stylotheca smooth, without ribbing. Body dimensions: lorica length 31–38 µm (85–110 µm after
Schulz 1933
), lorica width 18–21 µm (35–55 µm after
Schulz 1933
), stalk length 3–26 µm (50–110 µm after
Schulz 1933
). Reproduction by semi-circumvaginative exogemmic budding with formation of laterally placed ciliary swarmers (
Fig. 10
). Original measurements of
Pra.
halacari
were made using specimens from
Goa, India
.
Remarks on the systematics and nomenclature:
Pra.
halacari
was described from marine halacarid mites from interstitial sand (
Schulz 1933
) and classified with the genus
Thecacineta
Collin, 1909
. However, except for
Pra.
halacari
, formation of unciliated swarmers is characteristic for all species of the genus. It was for this reason that
Matthes (1956)
assigned
Pra.
halacari
to the current genus
Praethecacineta
Matthes, 1956
and placed it together with the genus
Thecacineta
in a new family,
Thecacinetidae
. Finally, in the keys for identification of suctorians of
Ukraine
(
Dovgal 1996
),
Praethecacineta
was placed into the subclass
Exogenia
Сollin,
1912 in
the new family
Praethecacinetidae
Dovgal, 1996
, based on the
type
of budding.
Jankowski (1981)
noted that the species identified by Batisse (1965) as
Pra.
halacari
was wrongly identified and proposed the new species name
Lissacineta
allgeni
. The generic name was later synonymyzed by
Dovgal (2002)
with
Thecacineta
,
and
Lis.
allgeni
was transferred into the genus. However, the absence of lorica ribbing warranted new species erection by
Jankowski (1981)
, while a smooth and slightly folded lorica is characteristic for
Pra.
halacari
. Thus, Jankowski’s species is considered a junior synonym of
Pra.
halacari
.
Distribution and host prevalence:
The species was previously observed near the Norwegian coast (Tromsø) and in the Kiel Bay (
Schulz 1933
) on unidentified halacarids.
Precht (1935)
later identified
Pra.
halacari
on
Copidognathus
spp in the latter locality. Rare instances of the species are also known from the Bulgarian coast of the Black Sea (
Detcheva 1992
).
Praethecacineta halacari
was found on the legs and body surface (both ventrally and dorsally) of
Copidognathus brachystomus
Viets
from the Black Sea near
Karadag
Natural Reserve (Kurortnoye, Crimea region,
Ukraine
;
Boshko & Dovgal 2004
). It was also recorded in interstitial sand at Cape Martian Reserve near the village of Nikita in the Yalta region (Crimea), from an unidentified halacarid mite (
Gelmboldt & Dovgal 2005
).
Among the suctorians observed by
Bartsch (1989
,
1998
,
2001
,
2003
), we identified several individuals of
Pra.
halacari
on the idiosomas of the following halacarid mites:
Cop.
brachystomus
Viets (
Bartsch 2001
),
Cop. magnipalpus
(Police), and
Caspihalacarus hyrcanus
Viets (
Bartsch 1998
)
from Black Sea soft sediment;
Cas.
hyrcanus
from the Caspian Sea (
Bartsch 1998
);
Cop.
brifacius
Bartsch from sandy deposits from the North Sea (
Bartsch 1989
); and on the idiosoma and gnathosoma of
Cop. meridianus
Bartsch off the coast of Western
Australia
(
Bartsch 2003
). Furthermore, from the figure in
Pepato & Tiago (2005)
, we have also identified
Pra.
halacari
on the idiosoma of
Cop. tupinamborum
Pepato & Tiago from the Atlantic coast of
Brazil
.
In the present study, we have also found
Pra.
halacari
on
Cop. arabicus
Chatterjee & Chang collected from
Goa
on the west coast of
India
(Arabian Sea) (
Figs. 9
–11). Seven of the 33 mites were infested by suctorians. We observed that
Pra.
halacari
was found on
Cop. arabicus
, but not on species of the co-occurring genera
Rhombognathus
and
Agauopsis
. Furthermore,
Pra.
halacari
is reported here for first time from
India
.