Fig. 1A in Dirty Tricks in the Plankton: Diversity and Role of Marine Parasitic Protists ...

Fig. 1A–-E. Protistan parasites of marine phytoplankton. A – Amoeba biddulphiae in the diatom Odontella sinensis. Left: recently attached parasite cell. Center: parasitic amoeba inside the host. Rigth: almost empty diatom frustule with protoplasm transformed into 10 amoebae (after Zuelzer 1927); B,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Skovgaard, Alf
Format: Still Image
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2014
Subjects:
Alf
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10371350
https://zenodo.org/doi/10.5281/zenodo.10371350
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Summary:Fig. 1A–-E. Protistan parasites of marine phytoplankton. A – Amoeba biddulphiae in the diatom Odontella sinensis. Left: recently attached parasite cell. Center: parasitic amoeba inside the host. Rigth: almost empty diatom frustule with protoplasm transformed into 10 amoebae (after Zuelzer 1927); B, C – the stramenopile fungi Lagenisma coscinodisci in the diatom Coscinodiscus sp.; B – host cell protoplasm transformed into parasite hyphae; C – expulsion of parasite swarmer cells. Courtesy of Gerhard Drebes, Plankton*Net Data Provider at the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine, http://planktonnet. awi.de; D – Parvilucifera sp. sporangium in a deceased dinoflagellate, Tripos macroceros, from the North Sea; E – Amoebophrya sp. in the dinoflagellate Tripos fusus from the North Sea. Arrows show extreme points of parasite. All scale bars: 50 µm. ... : Published as part of Skovgaard, Alf, 2014, Dirty Tricks in the Plankton: Diversity and Role of Marine Parasitic Protists, pp. 51-62 in Acta Protozoologica 53 (1) on page 53, DOI: 10.4467/16890027AP.14.006.1443, http://zenodo.org/record/10371349 ...