Marine Protozoa from Woods Hole / Bulletin of the United States Fish Commission 21:415-468, 1901
E-text prepared by Ronald Calvin Huber, while serving as Penobscot Bay Watch, Rockland, Maine, and Joseph E. Loewenstein, M.D.
My observations cover a period of two months, from the 1st of July to the 1st of September. During that time I was able to study and describe 72 species representing 55 genera, all from the limited space mentioned above. In addition to these there are a few genera and species upon which I have insufficient notes, and these I shall reserve until opportunity comes to study them further.
I take this opportunity to express my thanks to Dr. Hugh M. Smith for many favors shown me while at Woods Hole.
In dealing with these marine forms from the systematic standpoint, two courses are open to the investigator. He may make numerous new species based upon minor differences in structure, or he may extend previous descriptions until they are elastic enough to cover the variations. The great majority of marine protozoa have been described from European waters, and the descriptions are usually not elastic enough to embrace the forms found at Woods Hole. I have chosen, however, to hold to the conservative plan of systematic work, and to make as few new species as possible, extending the older descriptions to include the new forms.
The Protozoa described are distributed among the different orders as follows:
The pseudopodia are lobose, sometimes absent, the body then progressing by a flowing movement; the body consists of ectoplasm and endoplasm, the latter being granular and internal, the former hyaline and external. There is always one nucleus and one vacuole, but both may be more numerous. Reproduction takes place by division or by spore-formation. Fresh-water and marine.
Amœba guttala Duj. Fig. 1.
A minute form without pseudopodial processes, extremely hyaline in appearance, and characterized by rapid flowing in one direction. The body is club-shape and moves with the swollen end in advance. A comparatively small number of large granules are found in the swollen portion, while the smaller posterior end is quite hyaline. Contractile vacuole absent, and a nucleus was not seen. Frequent in decomposing vegetable matter. Length 37µ. Traverses a distance of 160µ in one minute.
Gary N. Calkins
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GARY N. CALKINS,
Department of Zoology, Columbia University.
Genus AMŒBA Auct.
Genus TRICHOSPHÆRIUM Schneider '78
Genus GROMIA Dujardin '35.
Genus TRUNCATULINA D'Orbigny.
Genus ACTINOPHRYS Ehr.
Genus HETEROPHRYS Archer.
Genus MASTIGAMŒBA F. E. Schultze '75.
Genus CODONŒCA James Clark '66.
Genus MONAS (Ehr.) Stein '78
Genus MONOSIGA Kent '81.
Genus CODONOSIGA (Jas. Clark '67).
Genus BODO (Ehr.) Stein.
Genus OXYRRHIS Duj.
Genus ASTASIA Ehr.
Genus ANISONEMA Bütschli
Genus DISTEPHANUS Stöhr.
Genus EXUVIÆLLA Cienkowsky '82.
Genus GYMNODINIUM Stein '78.
Genus GLENODINIUM (Ehr.), Stein '83.
Genus PERIDINIUM Ehr. '32, Stein '83.
Genus CERATIUM (Schrank).
Genus LACRYMARIA Ehr. '30.
Genus TRACHELOCERCA (Ehr. '83) Cohn '66.
Genus MESODINIUM Stein '62.
Genus TIARINA R. S. Bergh '79.
Genus LOXOPHYLLUM Dujardin '41.
Genus LIONOTUS Wrzesniowski '70.
Genus NASSULA Ehr. '33
Genus CHILODON Ehr.
Genus DYSTERIA Huxley '57.
Genus COLPIDIUM Stein '60
Genus URONEMA Duj. '41.
Genus PLEURONEMA Dujardin '41.
Genus LEMBUS Cohn '66.
Genus ANOPLOPHRYA Stein '60.
Genus TINTINNOPSIS Stein '67.
Genus PERITROMUS Stein '62.
Genus EPICLINTES Stein '62.
Genus AMPHISIA Sterki '78.
Genus EUPLOTES (Ehr. 1831) Stein '59.
Genus DIOPHRYS Dujardin '41.
Genus URONYCHIA Stein '52.
Genus ASPIDISCA Ehr. 1830.
Genus LICHNOPHORA Claparède '67.
Genus VORTICELLA (Linnæus 1767) Ehr. '38
Genus ZOOTHAMNIUM (Bory de St. Vincent 1824) Stein '38, '54.
Genus PODOPHRYA Ehr. '33.
Genus EPHELOTA Str. Wright '78.
Genus ACINETA Ehr. '33, Bütschli '88.
LIST OF REFERENCES.