1950
DOI: 10.1002/jmor.1050860302
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Morphology and taxonomy of the intestinal protozoa of the guinea‐pig, cavia porcella

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Cited by 75 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…Immuno¯uorescence and electron microscopy observations con®rm the structures previously reported for Caviomonas mobilis cells by Nie (1950). There is only onē agellum, but a second barren basal body, which probably develops at division, is present.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 68%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Immuno¯uorescence and electron microscopy observations con®rm the structures previously reported for Caviomonas mobilis cells by Nie (1950). There is only onē agellum, but a second barren basal body, which probably develops at division, is present.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 68%
“…It was very precisely described, after haematoxylin and protargol staining, by Nie (1950), who suggested a close relationship with Enteromonas, another intestinal agellate. The common features of Enteromonadidae, de®ned by the electron microscopic studies of Enteromonas and Trimitus (Brugerolle 1975(Brugerolle , 1986, have shown that these¯agellates belong to diplomonads, despite their mono-monad constitution.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The films were then fixed in Bouin-Hollande's fluid: cupric sulfate 2.5 g, picric acid 4 g, distilled water 100 mL, 40 % formaldehyde 10 mL, acetic acid 1.5 mL. for 5 h, were washed with 70 % ethanol, and were stained with 1 % protargol (Bayer) following the protocol of Nie (1950).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This was largely confirmed by electron microscopy studies (Brugerolle 1975(Brugerolle -1976Brugerolle and Lee 2000c) but is now challenged by molecular phylogeny (Gunderson et al 1995;Delgado-Viscogliosi et al 2000;Ohkuma et al 2000;Keeling 2002). Monocercomonas species live mostly in the intestines of vertebrates (Nie 1950;Honigberg 1963;Brugerolle and Lee 2000c) and some of these species have been described by electron microscopy (Mattern et al 1972;Brugerolle 1975Brugerolle -1976. In insects, several species live in termites, cockroaches and coleopterid larvae (Grasse´1952) and the species Monocercomonas orthopterum is found in Blatta orientalis, but none have been studied by electron microscopy or by molecular techniques.…”
Section: Trichomonad Speciesmentioning
confidence: 84%
“…The genera Polymastix and Monocercomonoides were distinguished by light microscopy after staining (Grasse1 952; Brugerolle and Lee 2000a), and later electron microscopy studies confirmed their oxymonad features and provided further arguments for distinguishing them Brugerolle 1981). Monocercomonoides species are endocommensal flagellates present in various anaerobic habitats such as the intestine of vertebrates (Nie 1950;Grasse´1952;Kulda and Nohynkova 1978) and also in the hindgut of many insects as reported by Grasse´(1952). Several species have been identifed in insects: Monocercomonoides melolonthae from melolonthoid larvae of coleopterids such as Cetonia (Grasse´1926; Travis 1932), Monocercomonoides tipulae from the hindgut of tipulid larvae (Geiman 1932;Ludwig 1946), Monocercomonoides orthopterum from Periplaneta orientalis and Ectobius lapponicus (Beˆlar 1916;Grasse´1952), Monocercomonoides panesthiae from the xylophagous blattid Panesthia javanica (Kidder 1936), Monocercomonoides globus from the roach Cryptocercus punctulatus (Cleveland et al 1934).…”
Section: The Oxymonads Monocercomonoides and Polymastixmentioning
confidence: 94%