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1 July 2002 Encystment-Inducing Factors in the Ciliate Euplotes elegans
Akiko Tomaru
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Abstract

Although starvation is considered one of the most important induces of ciliate encystment, its nature has been unclear. Euplotes is a well-known ciliate genus, but the relationship in Euplotes between encystment and food has not been reported. The encystment of Euplotes elegans is facilitated when it is transferred to Chalkley's solution without bacteria as food. A higher ciliate density also facilitates encystment. Thus, starvation and ciliate density needed to be examined. Ciliates were inoculated into 3 treatments: Chalkley's solution with formaldehyde-fixed bacteria as nutritive particles (FFB group), with polystyrene latex particles as non-nutritive particles (PLP group), and without particles (control group). Cysts appeared fastest and ciliate numbers increased in the FFB group. Although the encystment kinetics of the PLP group was similar to that of the control group, the encystment rate of the PLP group was lower than that of the control group in the earliest phase. This suggests that the ciliates were temporarily deceived into feeding on PLP, because they had food vacuoles containing PLP during the earliest phase of incubation. A cell-free old culture solution from a stationary phase, which probably contained excreted substances from high-density ciliates, also facilitated encystment.

Akiko Tomaru "Encystment-Inducing Factors in the Ciliate Euplotes elegans," Zoological Science 19(7), 741-746, (1 July 2002). https://doi.org/10.2108/zsj.19.741
Received: 13 February 2002; Accepted: 1 March 2002; Published: 1 July 2002
KEYWORDS
ciliate
encystment
food
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