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Epibiotic Bacteria on Several Ciliates from Marine Sediments
Authors:Slava S. Epstein  Dennis A. Bazylinski  William H. Fowle
Affiliation:Marine Science Center. Northeastern University, East Point, Nahant, Massachusetts 01908, USA;Department of Microbiology, Immunology, and Preventive Medicine, Iowa State University. Ames, Iowa 50011, USA;Electron Microscopy Center. Department of Biology, Northeastern University, Boston. Massachusetts 02115, USA
Abstract:
ABSTRACT Bacterial epibionts were observed on the surface of the marine sediment ciliate Geleia fossata. Rod-shaped bacteria, from 2-10 X103 per ciliate, were universally positioned in ciliated grooves, in apparent spatial association with dikinetids. SEM and TEM examination of the ciliates confirmed that a tight affiliation exists between the epibiotic bacteria and ciliate cortex infrastructures. These observations, as well as the distinct bacterial distribution pattern over ciliate surface, suggest that there is a close epibiont/host physiological integration. Epibiotic bacteria were also observed on the surfaces of other sediment ciliates from the genera Loxophyllum, Tracheloraphis, Geleia, Paraspathidium , and Cyclidium. These findings indicate that the bacterial/protozoa associations are widespread in the marine benthic environment. The potential benefits for both epibionts and their hosts are discussed.
Keywords:Benthos    chemolithotrophs    oxic-anoxic interface    prokaryotes    protozoa    symbiosis.
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