
doi: 10.1007/bf00983187
An intracellular parasite occurring inCryptomonas rostratiformis and less numerously also inC. erosa andC. phaseolus. The parasite is described. It grows in the dorsal side of the host near the nucleus from which it is optically indistinguishable in young stages. When mature the parasite fills 1/3 to 1/2 the volume of theCryptomonas cell. It is seen as a colourless blister, which pushes back the plastid of the host. Reproduction occurs by separation of the protoplast into a hundred or moreBodo-like swarmers which perhaps represent the infectious phase. Under certain conditions, however, such as during decline of theCryptomonas population, the parasite transforms into thick-walled spindle-shaped cysts. Like the swarmers these cysts are released by rupture of the cryptomonad cells. The fate of the cysts is not known. TheCryptomonas population is destroyed by the infection in the course of a few days. Literature studies have shown that the parasite has been known for a long time, but considered incorrectly by different authors as part of theCryptomonas, or as a result of phagotrophic uptake of theCryptomonas. The parasite is compared with a somewhat similar parasite inMallomonas, and with certain parasitic dinoflagellates. The similarity with the latter is superficial only as it posesses a eucaryotic nucleus. The parasite shows some similarity with the genusParadinium (Mycetozoa) as well as with certainSporozoa.
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