Speciation of termite gut protists: the role of bacterial symbionts

Authors

  • Michael F. Dolan Department of Geosciences, University of Massachusetts. Amherst, USA

Keywords:

bacterial symbionts, termite gut protists, parabasalia, endosymbiosis, trichomonads

Abstract

At least 12 termite gut protists have been named because of their bacterial symbionts. Dozens more species are diagnosed by epi- and endosymbionts and more still have regular bacterial associations referred to in their species description. Molecular systematic studies have begun to identify these bacteria, but the ecological relationswith their protist bionts are still unknown. Recent findingsof acetogenic spirochetesin termite gutsmay explain the peculiar arrangement of spirochetes on some of these protists. Other bacteria function as motility or chemotactic symbionts of these protists. The size and shape of the parabasal body, a Golgi complex, are morphological characters of the Parabasalia (trichomonads, hypermastigids) that may be influenced by regular, heritable epi- and endosymbiotic bacteria.

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Published

2010-03-12

Issue

Section

Review Articles