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
Thecacineta calix
(
Schroder, 1907
)
(
Fig. 6
, 12)
=
Acineta calix
Schroder, 1907
=
Thecacineta desmodorae
Schulz
=
Thecacineta subantarctica
Allgen
=
Thecacineta donsi
Allgen
=
Thecacineta paradesmodorae
Allgen
=
Thecacineta laophontis
Jankowski, 1981
,
syn. n.
=
Paracineta moebiusi
Kahl, 1934
,
syn. n.
Diagnosis:
Type
species of the genus. Marine loricate, suctorian. Cell body entirely fills the lorica and attached to their bottom. Lorica totally ribbed transversely. Apical part of body protrudes beyond lorica aperture. Up to 30 clavate tentacles with length about 90 µm arise from upper body surface. Macronucleus large, oviform, located at the bottom of the cell body. With large contractile vacuole placed in basal body part usually near macronucleus. Body dimensions: lorica high 73–113 µm (75–105 µm after
Matthes 1956
), width 25–28 µm (39–53 µm after
Matthes 1956
), body length 73–140 µm, body width 16–21 µm, diameter of lorica aperture (after
Matthes 1956
) 18–30 µm, macronucleus dimensions
7–16 x
6–7 µm, stalk length 9–39 µm (10–33 µm after
Matthes 1956
), stalk diameter 1.6–2 µm. Reproduction by vermigemmy with formation of single larval stage (swarmer), devoid of ciliature and crawling over the substrate.
Remarks on the systematics and nomenclature:
Thecacineta calix
, a marine, loricate, suctorian ciliate with a single apical fascicle of tentacles, was described from marine nematodes (
Schroder 1907
). Subsequently,
Collin (1909)
combined all known species that had a similar morphology into the genus,
Thecacineta
Collin, 1909
.
In 1912
, in a monograph on suctorian ciliates, Collin redescribed the genus and named
T. calix
as a
type
species.
T. calix
was investigated in detail by
Matthes (1956)
, in his revision of thecacinetid suctorians. Several species found on the interstitial marine nematodes and harpacticoid copepods were synonymyzed with
T. calix
:
T. desmodorae
Schulz
,
T. subantarctica
Allgen
,
T. donsi
Allgen
and
T. paradesmodorae
Allgen.
Jankowski (1981)
proposed a new specific name,
T. laophontis
, for
T. calix
found by
Matthes (1956)
on copepod crustaceans. The basis for his conclusion was the presence of some morphological differences between forms from crustaceans and nematodes. However,
Jankowski (1981)
did not present any arguments to support his conclusions. We believe that the name proposed by
Jankowski (1981)
is a junior synonym of
T. calix
.
A species of
Paracineta
was identified by Moebius (1888), cited after
Kahl, (1934)
from the Kiel Bay of the North Sea from “
Holocarus
sp.” under the name
Acineta crenata
(
Fraipont 1878
)
. According to Kahl’s (1934) opinion, the identification of
Par.
crenata
by Moebius (1888) was erroneous, and
Kahl (1934)
described it as a new species,
Par.
moebiusi
.
Both
Kahl (1934)
and
Curds (1987)
have indicated the host name for Kahl’s (1934) species as
Holocarus
sp.
Kahl (1934)
did not mention the systematic position of the host, whereas
Curds (1987)
noted that it was a crustacean. However, it is likely that this was a mistake, and that the host was a species of the mite genus
Halacarus
, family
Halacaridae
. We feel that
Par.
moebiusi
is similar enough to
T. calix
to warrant making it a junior synonym of
T. calix
.
Distribution and host prevalence:
T. calix
was observed on halacarid mites by
Gelmboldt & Dovgal (2005)
. It has been found on the idiosoma and legs of
Halacarellus
sp. in Odessa gulf of the Black Sea near biological station of the Odessa National University in the interstitial at a depth of
5–20 cm
.
Among the suctorians observed by
Bartsch (1989
,
1998
) and
Abé (1997)
, we identified
T. calix
from the Black Sea near Sevastopol on the idiosoma of
Halacarellus micropectinatus
Bartsch
; the North Sea on
Cop. fabricii
(Lohmann) (
Bartsch 1989
, Fig. 19;
Bartsch 1998
, Fig. 90); and from the northwest Pacific Ocean off Hokkaido,
Japan
, on the posterodorsal plate of
Actacarus octosetus
Abé
(
Abé 1997, figs. 5G, F
).
As
previously mentioned,
T. calix
has also been described from nematodes and copepods. Its presence on marine mites testifies to its wider distribution and host spectrum.