Title: The ethograms of Uronychia transfuga and Uronychia setigera (ciliata, hypotrichida): a comparative approach for new insights into the behaviour of protozoa
Abstract: The behavioural biology of Uronychia transfuga and Uronychia setigera was studied and their complete ethograms (namely the catalogues of both the qualitative elements and the relative quantitative parameters of locomotion) were drawn. Several other points of biological relevance emerged: (a) the two hypotrichs proved to have evolved only a partial substrate dependence, their adaptive strategy relies on a very weak grip on the substrate; (b) U. transfuga and U. setigera (they share the same basic body shape, while differing in body length, 118 and 64 μ, respectively), creep on the substrate following patterns quantitatively different in terms of their absolute values (e.g. velocity: U. transfuga ∼300 μm/s; U. setigera ∼150 μm/s). When the ratio between the same values and the species-specific body size is made (namely when the measurements are expressed in Relative Units, R.U.), they become quite similar to each other; this demonstrates that creeping of these two species is size-dependent; (c) the swimming of both species occurs only backwards and at incredibly high velocities (U transfuga: v→ = 6,302 μm/s, ≈54 RU/s; U setigera: v→ = 7,347 μm/s, ≈115 RU/s); (d) both species show clear-cut rheo-responses and photo-responses, that is, they are capable of reacting to water currents and to sudden increases of light. Double organisms of U. setigera do not creep, but swim forewards only irregularly and backwards along straight paths at high velocity (∼3,700 μm/s).
Publication Year: 1998
Publication Date: 1998-12-01
Language: en
Type: article
Indexed In: ['crossref']
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Cited By Count: 11
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