Tiny Organisms in Aquatic Habitats

Ciliates – SAR-Alveolata (Ciliophora)

Observations on Eufolliculina moebiusi

Position in the EOL taxonomic tree. Please click on the tree view below to access EOL (Encyclopedia of Life).

Eufolliculina moebiusi (Kahl, 1932) Hadži, 1951

Most likely ID: n.a.

Basionym: Folliculina moebiusi Kahl, 1932

Add’l Synonyms: Freia ampulla Möbius, 1885
                               Folliculina ampulla Sahrhage, 1917

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Sampling date 09/2006. Scale bars indicate 25 µm.

25 images. The specimen was grown on a slide suspended in water.

During an field trip with Prof. Dr. Klaus Hausmann (FU Berlin) we were able to observe the final stage of a binary fission in Eufolliculina moebiusi. The binary fission was already completed, the image series shows about the last two minutes of the process, in which the swarmer is about to leave the lorica of the mother cell and finally leaves it to look for a building site for its lorica.

Please click on < or > on the image edges or on the dots at the bottom edge of the images to browse through the slides!

Place name: Hiddensee Bodden (Germany)
Latitude: 54.582633     Longitude: 13.115051

Microscope Zeiss Axiovert, special microscope camera from Zeiss.

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Sampling date 10/2008. Scale bars indicate 50 µm.

Five images. The specimen was grown on a slide suspended in water.

Late state of binary fission, hi-res DOF images of lorica and the two cells.

Please click on < or > on the image edges or on the dots at the bottom edge of the images to browse through the slides!

Place name: Hiddensee Bodden (Germany)
Latitude: 54.582633     Longitude: 13.115051

Microscope Zeiss Universal, camera Olympus C7070WZ. DOF images.

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Sampling date 10/2008.

14 images. The specimen was grown on a slide suspended in water.

In 2008, I also had the opportunity on Hiddensee to observe a swarmer emerging from the lorica of the mother cell and to document the construction of the lorica.

First:The swarmer is looking for a free building site for its lorica.
Second:The swarmer has found a free building site for its lorica.
Third:The body has become extremely flattened in order to secrete chitin for the ground plate of the new lorica.
Fourth:The formation of a sickle-shaped cilia collar at the front end of the hawk moth indicates that the construction of the neck for the lorica has begun.
Fifth to seventh:Hi-res views on the early state of lorica formation. DOF images.
Eighth to tenth:Further views of advanced stages of lorica formation. Image #10 shows the completed lorica. DOF images.
Eleventh to fifteenth:Some stages of peristome lobe formation. DOF images.

Please click on < or > on the image edges or on the dots at the bottom edge of the images to browse through the slides!

Place name: Hiddensee Bodden (Germany)
Latitude: 54.582633     Longitude: 13.115051

Microscope Zeiss Universal, camera Olympus C7070WZ. Several DOF images.

© Wolfgang Bettighofer,
images under Creative Commons License V 3.0 (CC BY-NC-SA).
For permission to use of (high resolution) images please contact postmaster@protisten.de.

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