Freshwater Silicoflagellate
This is from an environmental tapelift collected in a home.
Transmitted Off Crossed Polarized Light Illumination
Definition/Function:
Silicoflagellates are amoung the group of life forms that make up the phytoplankton.
Their cast (seen here) is an opaline
silica and they are often encountered in diatomaeous earth deposits. Silicoflagellates
tend to be marine, autotrophic
flagellates producing their own food through photosynthesis. Many of the species are
very sensitive to temperature and so
become important indicators of paleoclimates in fossil deposits.
Significance in the Environment:
Silicoflagellates are often found in diatomaous earth deposits and aid in the
characterization of the conditions under which
the deposit formed. Near the ocean they are found in surface deposits as a result of
ocean spray
Characteristic Features:
Silicoflagellates are characterized by a basal ring with extending spines. Some species
have elaborate domes extending from
one surface of the basal ring, which results in a hemispherical asymmetry. They are
typically 20 to 50 micrometers in
diameter but some may be as large at 100 micrometers. The structure is isotropic silica
and so is dark
between crossed polarizing filters. The Distephanus genus has a apical (central) window.
Associated Particles:
References:
Haq, Bilal U. and Anne Boersma, INTRODUCTION TO MARINE MICROPALEONTOLOGY, Elsevier, pp.
267-273, 1978 (ISBN 0-444-00267-7)
http://www.microscopy-uk.org.uk/mag/indexmag.html?http://www.microscopy-uk.org.uk/mag/artjul07/rc-silicoflag.html