portrait
Description:
Metromonas (met-row-moan-ass) is a predator. Usually attached to the substrate by the curving posterior end of the longer flagellum (see, there is also a short one in most cells). They nod backwards and forwards. In cultures they usually appear in large numbers after the small bacterivorous flagellates - evidently preying upon them. Prey are ingested after encountering the margins of the cell. There are thin cylindrical structures near the margin - which we may assume to be associated with the capture of food. Unhappy cells tend to migrate by gliding along the substrate, with the flagellum no longer coiled but trailing behind the cells. Phase contrast
Included On The Following Pages:
- Life (creatures)
- Cellular (cellular organisms)
- Eukaryota (eukaryotes)
- SAR (Stramenopiles, Alveolates, Rhizaria)
- Rhizaria (rhizarians)
- Cercozoa (cercozoans)
- Metromonadea
- Metromonas
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- cc-by-nc
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- David Patterson, Linda Amaral Zettler and Virginia Edgcomb
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