Publications by authors named "Birgit Weissenbacher"

Strombidium is a species-rich genus of oligotrichid ciliates mainly inhabiting the marine pelagial. In molecular phylogenies, the genus emerged as non-monophyletic, and cladistic analyses suggest that it is largely characterized by plesiomorphies. A reliable split of the genus and the establishment of new genera necessitate, however, support by novel morphological and/or ultrastructural features.

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Resting cysts protect ciliates against adverse environmental conditions. The morphology and ultrastructure of resting cysts has been described in very few Oligotrichea, a group of mainly marine planktonic ciliates. The present study provides the first ultrastructural data for loricate choreotrichids, applying light and electron microscopy on the cysts of the tintinnid Schmidingerella meunieri (Kofoid and Campbell, 1929) Agatha and Strüder-Kypke, 2012.

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Article Synopsis
  • Urotrich ciliates are crucial in freshwater plankton, affecting food webs and consuming significant algal production during blooms.
  • The study focuses on four common urotrich morphotypes, using advanced morphological and molecular techniques to understand their diversity and distribution patterns better.
  • This research aims to enhance future ecological studies by providing detailed insights into urotrich ciliates and their environmental interactions, which will improve data utilization from high throughput sequencing in freshwater ecosystems.
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A recent ultrastructural study on the tintinnid ciliate Schmidingerella meunieri displayed unique types of somatic kinetids. The dikinetids (paired basal bodies) have, besides kinetodesmal fibrils and transverse ribbons, some special features, that is, overlapping postciliary ribbons and three extraordinary microtubular ribbons, which together form a conspicuous network in the ciliated anterior cell portion. The distribution of this feature among tintinnids is studied in chemically fixed and ultrathin-sectioned specimens from six genera and five families collected in European coastal waters.

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The ultrastructure of the oral apparatus is supposed to be significant for elucidating more recent common ancestry and might thus provide support for particular groupings of oligotrichean ciliates. The transmission electron microscopical study on mainly cryofixed Schmidingerella meunieri specimens provides the first detailed data for tintinnids and Oligotrichea in general. Ten new characters are included into the cladistic analysis.

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Using hydrofluoric acid, scanning electron microscope-assisted X-ray microanalysis, and energy-filtered transmission electron microscopy, we present the first definite proof of biomineralized silicon [(SiO(2))](n) in a ciliophoran protist, Maryna umbrellata, a common inhabitant of ephemeral pools. In the trophic specimen, the amorphic silicon (glass) granules are accumulated in the anterior half of the body. When entering the dormant stage, most glass granules are excreted to form the surface cover of the globular resting cyst.

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