Academic literature on the topic 'Ellobiopsis'

Create a spot-on reference in APA, MLA, Chicago, Harvard, and other styles

Select a source type:

Consult the lists of relevant articles, books, theses, conference reports, and other scholarly sources on the topic 'Ellobiopsis.'

Next to every source in the list of references, there is an 'Add to bibliography' button. Press on it, and we will generate automatically the bibliographic reference to the chosen work in the citation style you need: APA, MLA, Harvard, Chicago, Vancouver, etc.

You can also download the full text of the academic publication as pdf and read online its abstract whenever available in the metadata.

Journal articles on the topic "Ellobiopsis"

1

Gómez, F., and T. Horiguchi. "ULTRASTRUCTURAL FEATURES OF THE BASAL DINOFLAGELLATE Ellobiopsis chattoni (ELLOBIOPSIDAE, ALVEOLATA), PARASITE OF COPEPODS." CICIMAR Oceánides 29, no. 2 (2014): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.37543/oceanides.v29i2.135.

Full text
Abstract:
Ellobiopsis chattoni is the type species of the ellobiopsids, an enigmatic lineage of parasitic alveolates that branched between the syndinean dinoflagellates and the perkinsids. We have investigated the ultrastructure of four trophonts from three calanoid copepod hosts collected from the port of Valencia, northwestern Mediterranean Sea. The cell wall showed a thick and homogenous layer and flask-shaped mucocysts that excreted an electron-dense substance that forms the outer layer. The cell wall in the attachment peduncle of Ellobiopsis was thicker and with numerous invaginations. The inner section showed numerous longitudinal channels here interpreted as conduits for the transport of host fluids. Trophomere and gonomere were separated by a thin septum with a central pore. Before the mature gonomere detached from the trophomere, the area of junction became undulated. Deficiencies in the fixation of the membrane organelle preclude discussing on other ultrastructural features. To date the ultrastructure of three ellobiopsid genera have been examined. The trophonts of Ellobiopsis and Thalassomyces showed a high similarity in the cell wall, with characteristic flaskshaped mucocysts. The lack of flask-shaped mucocysts in Ellobiocystis and other morphological and ecological differences argue against the monophyly of the ellobiopsids. Caracteres ultrastucturales del dinoflagelado basal Ellobiopsis chattoni (Ellobiopsidae, Alveolata), un parásito de copépodos Ellobiopsis chattoni es la especie tipo de los ellobiópsidos, un enigmático linaje de alveolados parásitos que se sitúa entre los dinoflagelados Syndiniales y los perkinsoides. Hemos examinado la ultraestructura de cuatro trofontes que parasitaban tres copépodos calanoides procedentes del puerto de Valencia, Mediterráneo noroccidental. La pared celular presenta una capa gruesa y homogénea con mucocistos con forma de matraz que excretan una substancia electro-densa que forma la capa externa. El pedúnculo de adhesión de Ellobiopsis presenta una pared celular más ancha y con numerosas invaginaciones. El pedúnculo en su sección interna muestra numerosos canales longitudinales cuya función se ha interpretado como conductos para el transporte de los fluidos del hospedador. El trofonte y el gonómero están separados por un fino septo con un poro central. Esa región de unión es undulada cuando el gonomero maduro se separe del trofonte. Otros caracteres ultrastructurales no pueden ser descritos debido a deficiencias en la fijación de las membranas de los orgánulos. Hasta ahora se ha examinado la ultrastructura de tres géneros de ellobiopsidos. Los trofontes de Ellobiopsis y Thalassomyces muestran una gran similitud en su pared celular que presenta el mismo tipo de mucocistos. En contraste, la falta de mucocistos con forma de matraz en Ellobiocystis, además de otras diferencias morfológicas y ecológicas, pone en duda el supuesto origen monofilético de los ellobiópsidos.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
2

Gómez, F., and T. Horiguchi. "ULTRASTRUCTURAL FEATURES OF THE BASAL DINOFLAGELLATE Ellobiopsis chattoni (ELLOBIOPSIDAE, ALVEOLATA), PARASITE OF COPEPODS." CICIMAR Oceánides 29, no. 2 (2014): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.37543/oceanides.v29i2.135.

Full text
Abstract:
Ellobiopsis chattoni is the type species of the ellobiopsids, an enigmatic lineage of parasitic alveolates that branched between the syndinean dinoflagellates and the perkinsids. We have investigated the ultrastructure of four trophonts from three calanoid copepod hosts collected from the port of Valencia, northwestern Mediterranean Sea. The cell wall showed a thick and homogenous layer and flask-shaped mucocysts that excreted an electron-dense substance that forms the outer layer. The cell wall in the attachment peduncle of Ellobiopsis was thicker and with numerous invaginations. The inner section showed numerous longitudinal channels here interpreted as conduits for the transport of host fluids. Trophomere and gonomere were separated by a thin septum with a central pore. Before the mature gonomere detached from the trophomere, the area of junction became undulated. Deficiencies in the fixation of the membrane organelle preclude discussing on other ultrastructural features. To date the ultrastructure of three ellobiopsid genera have been examined. The trophonts of Ellobiopsis and Thalassomyces showed a high similarity in the cell wall, with characteristic flaskshaped mucocysts. The lack of flask-shaped mucocysts in Ellobiocystis and other morphological and ecological differences argue against the monophyly of the ellobiopsids. Caracteres ultrastucturales del dinoflagelado basal Ellobiopsis chattoni (Ellobiopsidae, Alveolata), un parásito de copépodos Ellobiopsis chattoni es la especie tipo de los ellobiópsidos, un enigmático linaje de alveolados parásitos que se sitúa entre los dinoflagelados Syndiniales y los perkinsoides. Hemos examinado la ultraestructura de cuatro trofontes que parasitaban tres copépodos calanoides procedentes del puerto de Valencia, Mediterráneo noroccidental. La pared celular presenta una capa gruesa y homogénea con mucocistos con forma de matraz que excretan una substancia electro-densa que forma la capa externa. El pedúnculo de adhesión de Ellobiopsis presenta una pared celular más ancha y con numerosas invaginaciones. El pedúnculo en su sección interna muestra numerosos canales longitudinales cuya función se ha interpretado como conductos para el transporte de los fluidos del hospedador. El trofonte y el gonómero están separados por un fino septo con un poro central. Esa región de unión es undulada cuando el gonomero maduro se separe del trofonte. Otros caracteres ultrastructurales no pueden ser descritos debido a deficiencias en la fijación de las membranas de los orgánulos. Hasta ahora se ha examinado la ultrastructura de tres géneros de ellobiopsidos. Los trofontes de Ellobiopsis y Thalassomyces muestran una gran similitud en su pared celular que presenta el mismo tipo de mucocistos. En contraste, la falta de mucocistos con forma de matraz en Ellobiocystis, además de otras diferencias morfológicas y ecológicas, pone en duda el supuesto origen monofilético de los ellobiópsidos.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
3

Bridgeman, Thomas B., Gretchen Messick, and Henry A. Vanderploeg. "Sudden appearance of cysts and ellobiopsid parasites on zooplankton in a Michigan lake: a potential explanation of tumor-like anomalies." Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 57, no. 8 (2000): 1539–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/f00-120.

Full text
Abstract:
Cysts on calanoid and cyclopoid copepods, previously reported as tumor-like anomalies (TLAs) in Lake Michigan and Europe, appeared briefly in Patterson Lake, a small Michigan inland lake. Cysts were rare (4% maximum) in samples collected on September 11, 1999, but appeared with high frequency on calanoid adults (49%) and cyclopoid nauplii (73%) in samples collected on October 16. By October 30, cysts were again rare (0.4% maximum). Cysts most commonly appeared on the lateral surface of the animal at the articulation of the 1st and 2nd prosomal segments and often consisted of herniated copepod tissues. Transparent, pyriform cysts co-occurred in low frequency with other types of cysts and are believed to be the trophomeres and gonomeres of ellobiopsid parasites. Histologic manifestations of cysts were diverse; herniations consisted of acellular yolk-like material and apparent host tissue, while cysts thought to be Ellobiopsis contained cells with different degrees of nuclear staining and unusual spherical bodies. Hernias were experimentally induced on live calanoid copepods by piercing the carapace with a fine needle, suggesting that ellobiopsid parasites may cause the hernias by puncturing the carapace of their hosts. Ellobiopsid parasites are common on marine crustacean zooplankton but have been recorded only once before in freshwater.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
4

Albaina, A., and X. Irigoien. "Fecundity limitation of Calanus helgolandicus, by the parasite Ellobiopsis sp." Journal of Plankton Research 28, no. 4 (2006): 413–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/plankt/fbi129.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
5

Purushothaman, Aishwarya, Lathika Cicily Thomas, and K. B. Padmakumar. "First record of epibiotic parasitic dinoflagellate Ellobiopsis chattoni on copepod Bestiolina similis from northeastern Arabian Sea." Symbiosis 80, no. 3 (2020): 239–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13199-020-00667-y.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
6

Gómez, Fernando, Purificación López-García, Antoine Nowaczyk, and David Moreira. "The crustacean parasites Ellobiopsis Caullery, 1910 and Thalassomyces Niezabitowski, 1913 form a monophyletic divergent clade within the Alveolata." Systematic Parasitology 74, no. 1 (2009): 65–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11230-009-9199-1.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
7

SILBERMAN, JEFFREY D., ALLEN G. COLLINS, LISA-ANN GERSHWIN, PATRICIA J. JOHNSON, and ANDREW J. ROGER. "Ellobiopsids of the Genus Thalassomyces are Alveolates." Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology 51, no. 2 (2004): 246–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1550-7408.2004.tb00555.x.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
8

Konovalova, G. V. "Parasitic dinoflagellates and ellobiopsids (Ellobiopsidae) of the coastal waters of the sea of Japan." Russian Journal of Marine Biology 34, no. 1 (2008): 28–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1134/s1063074008010045.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
9

Mooney, Jill R., and Thomas C. Shirley. "NEW HOSTS, PREVALENCE, AND DENSITY OF THE ELLOBIOPSID PARASITE THALASSOMYCES FAGEI ON EUPHAUSIIDS IN PRINCE WILLIAM SOUND, ALASKA." Journal of Crustacean Biology 20, no. 2 (2000): 320–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1651/0278-0372(2000)020[0320:nhpado]2.0.co;2.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
10

Mooney, Jill R., and Thomas C. Shirley. "New Hosts, Prevalence, and Density of the Ellobiopsid Parasite Thalassomyces Fagei on Euphausiids in Prince William Sound, Alaska." Journal of Crustacean Biology 20, no. 2 (2000): 320–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/20021975-99990043.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
More sources

Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Ellobiopsis"

1

Filho, José Eduardo Martinelli. "Variação temporal e crescimento do zooplâncton no litoral norte de São Paulo, com ênfase em estágios imaturos de copépodes." Universidade de São Paulo, 2013. http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/21/21134/tde-09042014-185741/.

Full text
Abstract:
O objetivo desta tese foi o estudo da variabilidade temporal, crescimento e produção do zooplâncton metazoário, com ênfase sobre estágios imaturos de copépodes, na região costeira de Ubatuba (SP, Brasil). Para tal, a comunidade zooplanctônica foi estudada durante as estações de verão e inverno em regime de dias alternados, para os anos de 2009 a 2011, através de coletas realizadas com redes de malha de 20 e 100 m. Índices ecológicos como densidade, diversidade e equitabilidade foram calculados. Os estágios imaturos de copépodes foram submetidos a experimentos de coortes artificiais em quatro classes de tamanho (50-80, 80-100, 100-150 e 150-200 m) para a determinação das taxas de crescimento de 14 táxons em diferentes estágios de desenvolvimento. A biomassa foi estimada através de equações de regressão comprimento-peso para o posterior cálculo da produção secundária. A incidência e possíveis efeitos de um protista alveolado parasita (Ellobiopsis sp.) sobre o crescimento de copépodes hospedeiros, com ênfase sobre a família Paracalanidae, também foi avaliada. A comunidade de copépodes esteve representada por 66 espécies e caracterizada por valores relativamente altos de diversidade e equitabilidade em relação aos demais trabalhos na plataforma interna da região sudeste do país. Os copépodes foram o grupo dominante, sendo que estágios naupliares foram os mais comuns para a rede de 20 m, enquanto que copepoditos juvenis dominaram para a rede de 100 m. A densidade do zooplâncton foi altamente variável, sendo os maiores valores registrados para o inverno de 2011 para a malha de 20 m (33.160 ± 23.136 org. m-3) e os menores para o inverno de 2009 para a malha de 100 m (5.393 ± 2.264 org. m-3). As famílias dominantes de copépodes foram Oithonidae, Oncaeidae, Paracalanidae e Acartiidae, sendo a primeira dominante também em termos de biomassa. Os estágios juvenis dos copépodes representaram uma biomassa entre 1,06 a 3,47 mg C m-3 para o inverno de 2010 e verão de 2009 respectivamente. Taxas de crescimento foram obtidas para sete táxons de Calanoida (0,41 ± 0,21 d-1), cinco de Cyclopoida (0,27 ± 0,17 d-1) e dois de Harpacticoida (0,31 ± 0,16 d-1). Os valores de crescimento foram semelhantes entre as diferentes classes de tamanho e as estações do ano, mas foram substancialmente diferentes entre as ordens, sendo geralmente maiores para os Calanoida. A produção média estimada para os estágios imaturos dos táxons dominantes de copépodes foi igual a 0,45 mg C m-3, valor conservativo por não contemplar as espécies de menor densidade e frequência. O crescimento de copépodes da família Paracalanidae, principalmente Parvocalanus crassirostris, foi afetado pelo protista parasita Ellobiopsis sp., uma vez que as fêmeas adultas infectadas foram significativamente menores do que as normais. Cerca de 5% das fêmeas da espécie estiveram infectadas pelo parasita, que provavelmente afeta o crescimento somático e reprodutivo de P. crassirostris, com efeitos ainda desconhecidos em termos de biomassa e produção. As taxas calculadas de crescimento e a produção são semelhantes às de outros trabalhos em regiões tropicais. A abordagem experimental através de coortes artificiais forneceu os primeiros resultados sobre o crescimento de estágios juvenis de copépodes para uma região subtropical do Atlântico Sul Ocidental e demonstrou que a concentração da clorofila-a não foi um fator limitante. Este é um dos poucos trabalhos a disponibilizar dados de crescimento, biomassa e produção de tais estágios em ecossistemas marinhos tropicais e que padroniza o método de coortes artificiais para obtenção do crescimento<br>This thesis aimed to evaluate the temporal variability of the metazoan zooplankton density, growth, and production, with emphasis on copepod immature stages in the coastal area of Ubatuba (São Paulo, Brazil). The zooplankton community was studied during summer and winter from 2009 to 2011, by means of sampling with 20 and 100 m mesh-sized nets. Ecological indexes such as density, diversity and evenness were calculated. Growth rates for 14 taxa of copepod juvenile stages were determined by the artificial cohort method, in four size classes and different developmental stages (50-80, 80-100, 100-150 and 150-200 m). Biomass was estimated by the use of length-weight regressions followed by secondary production estimates. The incidence and possible effects of the alveolate parasite Ellobiopsis sp. on the growth of the copepod hosts was also investigated, with emphasis on the Paracalanidae family. The copepod assemblage was represented by 66 species and displayed relatively high diversity and evenness, in comparison to other studies in the inner shelf of the Brazilian southeastern coast. Copepod was the dominant group; nauplii in the 20 m net, and juvenile copepodids in the 100 m net. The zooplankton density was highly variable: the highest densities occurred during winter 2011 in the 20 m samples (33,160 ± 23,136 org. m-3) and the lowest for the winter 2009 in the 100 m samples (5,393 ± 2,264 org. m-3). The dominant copepod families were Oithonidae, Oncaeidae, Paracalanidae and Acartiidae, the former being the main taxa in terms of biomass as well. Juvenile copepod biomass varied between 1.06 and 3.47 mg C m-3 in the winter 2010 and summer 2009, respectively. Growth rates were recorded for seven Calanoida (0.41 ± 0.21 d-1), five Cyclopoida (0.27 ± 0.17 d-1) and two Harpacticoida (0.31 ± 0.16 d-1) taxa. Growth values were similar between the different size classes, seasons and years, but were substantially different between copepod orders (higher rates for the Calanoida). The mean production for all immature copepod stages was 0.45 mg C m-3, a conservative value, since rare species were not accounted for. The growth of the Paracalanidae copepod Parvocalanus crassirostris, was affected by the parasite protist Ellobiopsis sp., since infected adult females were significantly smaller than normal individuals. About 5% of adult females were infected by the parasite, which probably reduced somatic and reproductive growth of P. crassirostris, with potential consequences for biomass accumulation and, consequently, production. Growth and production rates were similar to those found in other studies carried out in tropical regions. The artificial cohort method has been applied here for the first time on the tropical and subtropical Southwest Atlantic, where clorophyl-a concentration was not considered a limiting factor for growth rates. This is one of the few studies providing data on growth, biomass and production for copepod juvenile stages in tropical marine ecosystems and standardizing the artificial cohort method to measure the growth rates
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
We offer discounts on all premium plans for authors whose works are included in thematic literature selections. Contact us to get a unique promo code!

To the bibliography