80 4 Taxonomy, Physiology, and Ecology of Aquatic Microorganisms
- Suctoria
The juvenile forms are ciliated and motile, while the
adult forms are sessile and capture food by tentacles.
They feed by extracellular digestion and lack cilia in
the adult phase. The adult have structures called hap
tocysts at the tip which attach to the prey. The prey’s
cytoplasm is then sucked directly into a food vacuole
inside the cell, where its contents are digested and
absorbed. Most suctoria are around 15–30 mm in size,
with a noncontractile stalk and often a shell. Suctoria
reproduce primarily by budding, producing swarmers
which lack both tentacles and stalks but have cilia.
Once the swarmers (motile young) have found a place
to attach themselves, they quickly develop stalks and
tentacles and lose their cilia. Because of the presence
of cilia in the young of suctoria, some authors group
the suctoria among ciliates.
Suctoria are found in both freshwater and
marine environments, and some which live on the
surface of aquatic animals, and typically feed on
ciliates. Some marine species form symbiotic rela
tionships with crustaceans and even some fish.
One species, Ephelota gemmipara lives on the
external parasite of salmon, Lepeophtheirus sal
monis (salmon louse).
4.1.6.2 Fungi
Fungi are eukaryotic microorganisms which
(a) Are nonphotosynthetic and hence do not contain
chlorophyll
(b) Contain chitin and/or cellulose in their cell walls
(c) Are usually filamentous (called molds), but they
may be unicellular (called yeasts)
(d) Reproduce asexually with spores
Mastigophora
Apicomplexa
Ciliophora
Sarcodina
Flagellum
Pseudopodia
Cilia
Euglena
Chlamydomonas
Paramecium
Vorticella
Plasmodium in red blood cells
Amoeba
Arcella
Fig. 4.21 Protozoan groups. Illustrations of some Protozoa (From http://www.cliffsnotes.com/study_guide/topicArticleId-
8524,articleId-8461.html; Anonymous 2010 b. With permission)