The feeding of 18 species of thrcale hetrophi dinoflagellates from three genera (Protoperidininm, Oblea, Zygabikodinium) can all be described within one general framework. These species engulf diatoms and other prey with a pseudopod (herein terned a “Pallium”)which originates at the flagellar pore in the sulcus. The pallium is a highly plastic, membranous organ which rasily strethes to accommodate spines and many as 58 diatom cells in a chain. The contents of the phytoplanklon prey are liquified and transporued throughthe pallioum typically within 7 to 30 minutes of capture (although feeding may last 2 h) teaving an intact but empty cell wall or frustule. Thus far, with few exceptions, Protoperidinium specises have been observed feeding inly on diatoms, whereas two diplopsaloid species feed on dinoflagellates and prasinophytes as well. In four species from the three genera studied. a capture filament has been observed that connects the food to the dinoflagellate prior to extension of the pallium, sometimes allowing the cell to pull the food while swimming. A distinctive precapture swimming behavior is also deseribed foe six species, suggesting that the dinoflagellates are selective grazers.
An electron microscopic examination of large amorphous inclusions located in a variety of photosynthetic thecate dinoflagellates (Alexandrium ostenfeldii (Paulsen) Balech et Tangen, Gonyaulax diegensis Kofoid, Scrippsiella sp., Ceratium longipes (Bailey) Gran, and Prorocentrum micans Ehrenberg) and a nonphotosynthetic thecate species (Amylax sp.) revealed each inclusion to be a food vacuole, the majority of which were ingested ciliate prey. Recognizable features of these ciliates included linear arrays of basal bodies and cilia consistent with oligotrich polykinetid structure, characteristic macronuclei, chloroplasts (evidently kleptoplastids), cup‐shaped starch plates, and cylindrical extrusomes. Three species contained (apparent) nonciliate prey: Scrippsiella sp., whose food vacuoles consistently contained unusual and complex extrusome‐like cylindrical bodies having a distinctive six‐lobed, multilayered structure; P. micans, which contained an unidentified encysted cell; and a single A. ostenfeldii cell, containing a Dinophysis sp. dinoflagellate cell. Several food vacuoles of ciliate origin had a red hue. This, together with the resemblance of A. ostenfeldii cells to planozygotes, suggests that similar structures previously identified as accumulation bodies may in fact be food vacuoles and that feeding may in some cases be associated with sexual processes.
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