-
Lugol's-fixed specimen from Pt B in Villefranche in December 2010.
-
Tintinnopsis radix FRom the Ganges River, estuarine portion (st ganga) in Jan 2013
-
This is an early stage of cell division in which the daughter cell is being formed with the development of a new mouth. The cell is an Protargol preparation of a sample from the Chesapeake Bay in 1987.
-
Parasites were mistaken for cysts, spores, embryos and gametes in early studies. The Laackmann 1908 paper is available on the Aquaparadox site on the page 'Classic Monographs'.
-
Specimen from the East Med
-
Specimen from the Ionian Sea
-
The lorica wall has a mesh appearance.
-
Codonella aspera was first depicted by Fol in 1884 as Codonella galea. The organism described by Fol was later named Codonella aspera. Codonella nationalis described by Brandt in 1906 and now appears to be a morph of C. aspera.
-
Image by D.W. Coats
-
Parafavella all the same species to Schulz & Wulff. Plate showing morphotypes Wulff ascribed to one species from Schulz & Wulff 1929.
-
Morphological variabilty in Parafavella found samples from different stations in the Barents Sea in was studied by Schulz & Wulff - Wulff drew pictures of each encountered at the different stations from the Russian coast at 69°N to about 77°N along a transect at 34°E. THe image is negative version of Plate 13 from Schulz, B., Wulff, A. 1929. Hydrographie und Oberflacenplankton des Estlichen Barentsmeeres im Sommer 1927. Ber. Dtsch. Wiss. Meeresforsch. 4:1-144.
-
-
Lugol's-fixed specimen from the Bay of Villefranche in Sept. 2010.
-
-
-
-
Specimen from the Scripp's Canyon area in July 2009
-
Specimen from Scripps Canyon area in July 2009
-
-
Mosty closely fits the form described but the species is likely a morph of P. denticulta. From the Bering Sea in 2009.
-
A small Climacocylis species found in the Indian Ocean, Tara Oceans Expedition Station 52.
-
-
Here only the shell or lorica is visible. The specimen was from the South Pacific
-
This specimen is from the central Med found in material from the Boum cruise.