Fate of protozoa transiting the digestive tract of the earthworm Lumbricus terrestris L.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2002
Abstract
In situ hybridization and subsequent epifluorescence microscopy showed that passage through the anterior part of the digestive tract (pharynx, esophagus, gizzard) of Lumbricus terrestris L. reduced numbers of protozoa indigenous to soil, shifted their cell size distribution from 3-5 μm and larger towards smaller sizes (1-3 μm), and eliminated all cells with ingested bacteria. Incubation of cast resulted in a ten-fold increase of protozoan numbers, size distribution shifts towards larger cells, and the detection of large numbers of cells with ingested bacteria (up to 46% of the total number of cells). The suggestion that large cell sizes represented vegetative cells that were disrupted in the anterior part of the digestive tract, while small cells were cysts that passed the intestine unharmed and proliferate in cast was supported by feeding studies with vegetative cells and cysts of an Acanthamoeba sp. Vegetative cells were quantitatively disrupted in the anterior part of the digestive tract, while cysts passed through the digestive tract morphologically intact. Their failure to form vegetative cells in cast, however, suggested an additional physiological impact of passage through the digestive tract of L. terrestris on cysts of the Acanthamoeba sp.
Identifier
0036223838 (Scopus)
Publication Title
Pedobiologia
External Full Text Location
https://doi.org/10.1078/0031-4056-00122
ISSN
00314056
First Page
161
Last Page
175
Issue
2
Volume
46
Grant
421230
Recommended Citation
Cai, Houjian; Zarda, Boris; Mattison, Geoffrey R.; Schönholzer, Frank; and Hahn, Dittmar, "Fate of protozoa transiting the digestive tract of the earthworm Lumbricus terrestris L." (2002). Faculty Publications. 14988.
https://digitalcommons.njit.edu/fac_pubs/14988
