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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: A heterotrophic mastigote from the flat laminated Microcoleus-dominated intertidal microbial mat at the Sippewissett salt marsh, Cape Cod, Massachusetts, was isolated into monoprotist culture in the same anoxic medium that led to spirochete and other anaerobic bacterial enrichments. The protist grew vigorously and was transferred indefinitely in oxic marine medium. Videomicroscopy as well as scanning and transmission electron microscopy were used to document its features. The swimming and perching behavior, nutritional mode (bactivory) and morphology including ultra-structure identify it as an aloricate bicosoecid. The presence of heteromorphic acronematic undulipodia, bilateral bipartite tubular mastigonemes, absence of a cytostome, absence of extrusomes, and presence of "Dauerstadien" (duration stages) distinguish this from other Cafeteriaceae bicosoecids. Cell division involves a closed intranuclear spindle. The unspecialized bicosoecid morphology and behavior juxtaposed with oomycete-like vesicles and mastigonemes suggest that this protist may be an extant descendant of a common ancestor of bicosoecids and other stramenopiles (e.g. labyrinthulids, thraustochytrids and oomycetes). A new genus and species, Acronema sippewissettensis, are proposed.
    Keywords: Exobiology
    Type: European journal of protistology (ISSN 0932-4739); Volume 34; 4; 402-14
    Format: text
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Spirochetes from microbial mats and anaerobic mud samples collected in salt marshes were studied by light microscopy, whole mount and thin section transmission electron microscopy. Enriched in cellobiose-rifampin medium, selective for Spirochaeta bajacaliforniensis, seven distinguishable spirochete morphotypes were observed. Their diameters ranged from 0.17 micron to 〉 0.45 micron. Six of these morphotypes came from southwest Cape Cod, Massachusetts: five from Microcoleus-dominated mat samples collected at Sippewissett salt marsh and one from anoxic mud collected at School Street salt marsh (on the east side of Eel Pond). The seventh morphotype was enriched from anoxic mud sampled from the north central Cape Cod, at the Sandy Neck salt marsh. Five of these morphotypes are similar or identical to previously described spirochetes (Leptospira, Spirochaeta halophila, Spirochaeta bajacaliforniensis, Spirosymplokos deltaeiberi and Treponema), whereas the other two have unique features that suggest they have not been previously described. One of the morphotypes resembles Spirosymplokos deltaeiberi (the largest free-living spirochete described), in its large variable diameter (0.4-3.0 microns), cytoplasmic granules, and spherical (round) bodies with composite structure. This resemblance permits its tentative identification as a Sippewissett strain of Spirosymplokos deltaeiberi. Microbial mats samples collected in sterile Petri dishes and stored dry for more than four years yielded many organisms upon rewetting, including small unidentified spirochetes in at least 4 out of 100 enrichments.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: Microbiologia (Madrid, Spain) (ISSN 0213-4101); Volume 12; 4; 571-84
    Format: text
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