sharing our knowledge.
Photographic gallery.  Thousands of particles under the microscope.
Coleps Under the Microscope

Coleps

This is from a water sample out of a pond near the Knife River.

Transmitted Off Crossed Circular Polarized Light Illumination

Definition/Function:

Coleps is a freshwater ciliate with an exterior amorphous calcium carbonate cage. It feeds by boring into its food by rotating with its "teeth" imbedded in the food source. The food source may be rotting biological material or living organisms. They are also parasites of game fish.

Significance in the Environment:

Characteristic Features:

Coleps (Colepidae) are barrel-shaped typically with spikes at least at the feeding end of the structure. The barrel consists of an amorphous form of calcium carbonate that is regularly perforated, resulting in a cage-like structure. They range in size from about 30 to 100 micrometers in length.

Associated Particles:

References:

Pennak, Robert W., FRESHWATER INVERTEBRATES OF THE UNITED STATES, 2nd ed., Wiley-Interscience, ISBN 0-471-04249-8, pp. 24 and 60, 1978.