1. Mobilifilum chasei: morphology and ecology of a spirochete from an intertidal stratified microbial mat community.
- Author
-
Margulis L, Hinkle G, Stolz J, Craft F, Esteve I, and Guerrero R
- Subjects
- Animals, Flagella ultrastructure, Mexico, Microscopy, Electron, Oceans and Seas, Soil Microbiology, Spirochaetales classification, Symbiosis, Ecology, Environmental Microbiology, Spirochaetales physiology, Spirochaetales ultrastructure
- Abstract
Spirochetes were found in the lower anoxiphototrophic layer of a stratified microbial mat (North Pond, Laguna Figueroa, Baja California, Mexico). Ultra-structural analysis of thin sections of field samples revealed spirochetes approximately 0.25 micrometer in diameter with 10 or more periplasmic flagella, leading to the interpretation that these spirochetes bear 10 flagellar insertions on each end. Morphometric study showed these free-living spirochetes greatly resemble certain symbiotic ones, i.e., Borrelia and certain termite spirochetes, the transverse sections of which are presented here. The ultrastructure of this spirochete also resembles Hollandina and Diplocalyx (spirochetes symbiotic in arthropods) more than it does Spirochaeta, the well known genus of mud-dwelling spirochetes. The new spirochete was detected in mat material collected both in 1985 and in 1987. Unique morphology (i.e., conspicuous outer coat of inner membrane, large number of periplasmic flagella) and ecology prompt us to name a new free-living spirochete.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF