Friday, 24 May 2024

A mystery solved...

 

 


Quite often we find odd little critters under the microscope lens that defy identification despite best efforts. Often they have added appendages or shortened features that just don't fit what the identification keys are leading you to. This has happened to me a few times when, after watching a video about centrifuges, I spun the samples at 4000 RPM as described in the video. Apparently this is a no-no and eukaryotes should never, if you value their well being, be spun at more than 800 RPM. Other injuries can be sustained when transferring specimens from jar to slide and then there is the always dangerous cover slip. In the following video is a peritrich that is stuck in some fibers that I thought might be loricated (encased in a shell) peritrich but was unable to ID with the keys available to me. An internet ciliate expert, Bruce Taylor, suggested that it might be a distressed member of the order Sessilida. That got me thinking about checking out that particular jar for similar specimens and the mystery was solved. This was a peritrich that looked like a type of vorticella that had its stalk and myoneme broken off.

 




Saturday, 18 May 2024

An amoeba ingested a diatom...

 This little fella had ingested a fairly long diatom but seemed to not want to, or be unable to, relinquish it despite it seeming to cause it some locomotion problems. In the past I had seen an amoeba let go of a long filamentous algae that it just couldn't envelope.  

 



Tuesday, 14 May 2024

Some Peranemids showing metaboly movement under darkfield illumination

 On April 21 of this year I posted a still image of some Peranemids using a darkfield oiled condenser and 50X oil objective. A few friends commented on a video I had made of the same group so I thought I'd post it now. It's a useful video for showing euglenid metaboly motion.



Sunday, 12 May 2024

Stentor Roeselii video, Codonella cratera and a few others...

 


Codonella cratera, one of the few freshwater tintinnids 




Genus Spirostomum

Unknown ciliate

Heliozoan, possibly Actinosphaerium eichhorni


This amoeba was dragging around a big diatom it had ingested