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	 Protozoa - more ciliates - Loxodes
|  | Query: animal forms | Result: 105th of 142 |  | 
 
| Subject: | Protozoa - more ciliates - Loxodes 
 |  | Poster: | Schmode (schmode@vossnet.de) 
 |  |  |    | File size    : 42184 bytes
File date    : 2001:02:21 16:31:43
Resolution: 850x632
Jpeg process : Baseline
Posted Newsgroups: alt.binaries.pictures.animals
Posted Date: Tue, 19 May 1998 23:05:06 +0200 | 
^o^
 
Animal Pictures Archive for smart phones
^o^| Hello again,
 
 here comes another member of the ciliate family. This fellow is called a
 Loxodes.
 
 I'm bringing you this shot for two reasons. First this picture nicely
 shows the different stages of algae digestion. Loxodes is a ferocious
 algae eater; it devours all kinds of them. The yellowish-green filaments
 are called blue algae; these are, along with bacteria, the most
 primitive forms of life found on earth, not even having a nucleus. The
 barrel-shaped alga on the right is a diatomea; this is an alga with a
 solid shell of silicic acid. The bigger round-shaped bubbles are,
 precisely speaking, not algae but small euglenae; as you may remember
 from one my "euglena acus" posting these organisms have numerous
 animal-related features such as active movement and a light-sensitive
 organ. Watch the green spot being closest to the lower margin of the
 image; this is an euglena recently devoured with its red eye stain still
 visible. You see that during the digestion process the colour  of
 Loxodes' prey changes from green to brownish-yellow; this is due to the
 degradation of chlorophyll in this process.
 
 The other reason I'm showing you this shot is different: You may have
 noticed that this one is not as crisp as the ones you've seen before.
 I'll try to make the story short: Ciliates move so quickly that they
 need to be immobilized to get a good shot at them. Chemical methods
 exist but I dislike them because they usually change the organism's
 appearance. There is a much better method: In light microscopy you
 usually watch the object between two glass slides - the object slide
 (big, below the object) and the cover glass (small, above). If you just
 let a sufficient amount of water evaporate the organism will get jammed
 between the glass slides being unable to move quickly. This is the right
 moment for the great shot; all my ciliate pictures were made that way.
 
 But - that doesn't work with Loxodes. This organism, as soon as being
 jammed somewhere, immediately starts a process of self-degradation which
 leaves nothing but the half-digested algae. This is why it is extemely
 hard to get a shot of Loxodes; you hardly have time to focus upon, and
 when you hesitate to pull the trigger there is nothing left of Loxodes.
 
 I wonder if big game photographers ever had to cope with problems like
 this :-)
 
 Bye,
 
 Ralf
 
 
 
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