Showing posts with label heliozoans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label heliozoans. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Life in 10 Drops of Water: Assorted Protists and rotifers

This is the fourth in the series of images of some of the organisms found in just a few drops of water collected from a pond in a disused quarry on the edge of the moors in Weardale.



An amoeba. I could spend a long time watching these - it's rather relaxing watching an organism whose motto for life must be 'go with the flow'

It seems to have ingested a wide varieties of objects.

This is one of the free-swimming ploimate rotifers, with tails that look like scissors - possibly Monommata caudata...? 

Vorticella - a ciliate protist on a stalk, that contracts like a spring when disturbed. The green object is a cyanobacterium - possibly Gloeocapsa.

A ciliate protist that creeps along using strange 'whiskers' - and also swims very actively using smaller cilia. You can see a contractile vacuole quite nicely here. I think this, and the three below, might all be Oxytricha.



All three of the above ciliate protists look rather well fed - full of undigested algae.

This beautiful object is the flask-shaped shell of the testate rhizopod Cyphoderia ampulla. The amoeba that lived inside has long-since died.


I thought this might be the shell of a testate rhizopod, but Natalia has kindly identified it as a tintinnid  ..........

... at higher magnification you can see that it's constructed of tiny translucent particles....

... that are especially fine and fit together beautifully around the orifice




.... and finally another heliozoan, that appears to be ingesting something

Saturday, April 23, 2011

Swallowed by the Sun Animacule

I've long been fascinated by heliozoans aka 'sun animacules' and have posted on them before, but thought I would again because I've captured some pictures of one without squashing it under a coverslip - and also photographed it digesting its last meal. Briefly, heliozoans are single-celled amoebae which, instead of flowing around and engulfing their food with cytoplasmic arms called pseudopodia, radiate spines of cytoplasm supported by an internal scaffold of microtubules. They roll through the water like a one-tenth-of-a-millimetre-in-diameter sea mine, bringing dead to anything small that contacts those spines. This is a through-focus sequence of this microscopic protist menace, so in the image above we are looking down on the upper surface, onto what looks like a sphere of cytoplasm radiating needles in every dimension... 

.... and here the focus has moved down a bit, onto the surface of that cytoplasm, which is broadly divided up into a pattern of hexagonal blisters....

.... and now we are looking at the contents of its central food vacuole - and this heliozoan has somehow managed to ingest a testate rhizopod - a form of amoeba that lives in a shell shaped like a hot air balloon. Incidentally, all the pictures on this post will be clearer if you double-click on them to enlarge them in a separate window. Below is the same sequence, but this time at x400 magnification instead of x100......


..... so here are the surface hexagons, with the base of those lethal radiating spines....

..... and here is the blistered pattern - which looks like cells but this is a single-celled protist - so they must be formed with the aid of microtubules, I guess ......

.... and here's its food vacuole, with ingested testate rhizopod. It will digest the cytoplasm of its prey and spit out the empty shell.

It's easy to loose a sense of scale when peering down the microscope at small organisms - a sense of their place in the universe. So the picture above shows the place where this 100 micron predator came from - from the moss around the edge of this small pool on bleak moorland in Weardale, County Durham . The pool is about a metre long, so if you lined up 10,000 heliozoans spine-tip-to-spine-tip they'd stretch from one end to the other ....

..... and that tiny pool is somewhere in the middle distance in this landscape ......... and beyond that the solar system and beyond that the universe, home to an exquisite tiny life form that has been rolling through our planet's water, ingesting whatever it touches, for well over a billion years. Time travel is possible if you have a microscope....

Saturday, May 23, 2009

Porcupines of the Pond






This amazing creature is a heliozoan (literally ‘sun animal’), which is an amoeba that surrounds itself with a formidable battery of needle-sharp spines, radiating out from its core like sunbeams. Heliozoans are between a tenth and a quarter of a millimetre in diameter and drift through the water, slowly spinning. Each spine has a thin film of cytoplasm that flows up to its tip and them back down into the core, and any small food particles that the tip of the spine contacts are carried downwards on this conveyor and engulfed into the food vacuoles of the organism. The size of the core varies – normally it’s quite compact but it can expand by forming a mass of vacuoles (second and third photos down) and if it’s seriously stressed, like the heliozoan in the bottom picture, it flattens its spines and crawls across surfaces like a normal amoeba. These specimens came from water squeezed from moss on the edge of a pond. I used a microscope equipped with differential interference contract (DIC) optics to show the internal structure and needle-like spines. DIC optics generate a three dimensional image of transparent objects, which are otherwise difficult to see with conventional microscope optics.