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On the symbiosis between<i>Amphidinium klebsii</i>[Dinophyceae] and<i>Amphiscolops langerhansi</i>[Turbellaria: Acoela]
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1971
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BiologyEngineeringPhylogeneticsBotanyProtistNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyCellular IntegrationAlgal PartnersAquatic OrganismPhycologyAlgal BiologySymbiosisMarine BiologyMarine BiotaIntroduction Algal-invertebrate Symbiosis
INTRODUCTION Algal-invertebrate symbiosis is common among species of acoelus Turbellaria in both marine and freshwater environments (Droop, 1963; Buchner, 1965; McLaughlin & Zahl, 1966). Associations involving these organisms exhibit broad variations in the amount of integration achieved through the reciprocal relations of hosts and symbionts. In the symbiosis involving Convoluta roscqffensis Graff, the maximum degree of intimacy is achieved, and the host appears totally dependent on its symbiont for its nutritional requirements (Keeble & Gamble, 1907; Keeble, 1910). This type of closed symbiosis is unknown in other invertebrate phyla and may even be unique among turbellarians. Similarly, the association between Amphiscolops langerhansi (Graff) and a unicellular alga is a typical example of the more common, open or facultative symbiosis. Both species (with their algal partners) are potentially useful as investigative tools in the study of cellular interaction in algal-invertebrate symbiosis, and may provide the basis for understanding the broader aspects of cellular integration in metazoan tissues. Recent studies of C. roscqffensis provide a basis for understanding the biology of the symbiosis which it sustains (Parke & Manton, 1967; Provasoli, Yamasu & Manton, 1968; Provasoli, Yamasu & Mabuchi, 1969). The present communication is intended to provide similar information on the association found in A. langerhansi .
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