What is this organism?
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What is this organism?
I found many examples of this organism in a sample from a local marsh. The organisms are about 150 microns long , when extended, bright green, and are continuously twisting and turning, stretching and compressing. I'v attached a couple of DSLR images taken with 40x and 20x objectives. Thanks
michael
michael
- Attachments
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- Micro_2064_20xweb2.jpg (141.46 KiB) Viewed 5506 times
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- Micro_2134_40xweb2.jpg (240.89 KiB) Viewed 5506 times
Olympus BH2,
AO110
Carl Zeiss Standard WL
Canon 90D
AO110
Carl Zeiss Standard WL
Canon 90D
Re: What is this organism?
Looks like Euglena. Nice shot!
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Re: What is this organism?
Thanks for the reply hkv. I was never able to see flagella, so I don't think it is Euglena, it was also much larger (3x) than the Euglena I've seen before.
Thanks for the comment on the image!
Michael
Thanks for the comment on the image!
Michael
Olympus BH2,
AO110
Carl Zeiss Standard WL
Canon 90D
AO110
Carl Zeiss Standard WL
Canon 90D
Re: What is this organism?
I have no idea myself, but I like it! I wish I had some to study.
What country are you in, what climate?
What country are you in, what climate?
Re: What is this organism?
Not seen any that are as flexible as yours seem to be, so perhaps not an euglena but yes to a member of Phylum Euglenozoa
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euglenozoa
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euglenozoa
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Re: What is this organism?
I will second hkv here. Euglena vary a great deal in size; some species are as small as 20 µm or so, while for instance E. ehrenbergi can reach 400 µm in length. Especially in these longer types, movement is often by metaboly – flexing and changing shape – and the flagellum is then often short and harder to see.
If not a Euglena proper this would have to be some close relative, as shown by the typical euglenoid form and eyespot. There are now a number of genera that are hard to tell apart, but I'm not sure that any others get so large except Lepocinclis, which are more rigid.
If not a Euglena proper this would have to be some close relative, as shown by the typical euglenoid form and eyespot. There are now a number of genera that are hard to tell apart, but I'm not sure that any others get so large except Lepocinclis, which are more rigid.
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Re: What is this organism?
Thanks everyone for the Euglena suggestion, I now think that's what they are. I researched further and found a video of E.mutabilis on the Euglena Wikipedia page, it certainly looks very similar in size, shape, colour and movement to the properties of my specimens. I re-sampled my source and really tried to find evidence of flagella - no luck. Then I "stretched" all of my dozens of images in Photoshop to enhance fine details - still no luck finding the flagella. I'm attaching a shot of eyespot area (40x objective/DSLR) to this post to illustrate this.
Thanks everyone,
Michael
Thanks everyone,
Michael
- Attachments
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- Micro_2181_40x2.jpg (228.19 KiB) Viewed 5447 times
Olympus BH2,
AO110
Carl Zeiss Standard WL
Canon 90D
AO110
Carl Zeiss Standard WL
Canon 90D
Re: What is this organism?
Flagella are in general very difficult to see in Brightfield. A good reason to add Phase Contrast to one's wish list.
Zeiss Standard WL (somewhat fashion challenged) & Wild M8
Olympus E-P2 (Micro Four Thirds Camera)
Olympus E-P2 (Micro Four Thirds Camera)
Re: What is this organism?
Flickr: https://www.flickr.com/photos/micromundus
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/micromundusphotography
Web: https://hakankvarnstrom.com
Olympus BX51 | Olympus CX23 | Olympus SZ40 | Carl ZEISS EVO LS 10 Lab6 | Carl Zeiss Jena Sedival
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/micromundusphotography
Web: https://hakankvarnstrom.com
Olympus BX51 | Olympus CX23 | Olympus SZ40 | Carl ZEISS EVO LS 10 Lab6 | Carl Zeiss Jena Sedival
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Re: What is this organism?
Not all species of Euglena have emergent flagella. One that does not is the common species Euglena mutabilis, which (as you've already noted) resembles your euglenid, but is typically a bit smaller. Another is E. carterae (=E. deses var. carterae).still no luck finding the flagella
Also, some euglenids readily shed their flagella, particularly when dividing, or under stress (a process called flagellar autotomy).