Amoebidium
Amoebidium is a genus of unicellular, symbiotic eukaryotes in the Opisthokont group Mesomycetozoea, family Amoebidiidae. Amoebidium species attach to the exoskeleton of freshwater aquatic arthropods such as midge larvae and water fleas. The type species is , which is also one of the only species to be cultured axenically.
Etymology
Derived from the word "amoeba" to refer to the amoeba-like dispersal cells formed during some stages of the life cycle.Description
Amoebidium species are single-celled, cigar-shaped or tubular in vegetative growth form, and attach to the exoskeleton of various freshwater arthropod hosts by means of a secreted, glue-like basal holdfast. The thalli are coenocytic the entire content of the cell divides into elongated, uninucleate spores the entire content of the cell divides to produce teardrop-shaped, motile amoeboid cells that disperse for a short time, then encyst and produce spores from the cyst.Species
There are currently five species that have been named and are differentiated based on the size and shape of the thalli, spores, and dispersal amoebae. Amoebidium parasiticum is the most commonly encountered species in field collections, and appears to have a cosmopolitan distribution with collections from the Czech Republic, Denmark, England, France, Israel, Japan, the Philippines, Poland, Singapore, Spain, Tunisia, and the United States including Puerto Rico. It has also been found in association with a variety of hosts including copepods, amphipods, isopods, mayfly nymphs, and black fly and midge larvae. The other four species have been collected from limited geographic areas, but it is unclear whether these species truly have a limited distribution or if the observed distribution is an artifact of limited sampling. For example, A. recticola has not been reported in the literature since 1920 and was originally collected from Daphnia living in a reptile tank at the Paris Museum, France.- A. appalachense Siri, White & Lichtwardt 2006
- A. australiense Lichtwardt & Williams 1992
- A. colluviei Lichtwardt 1988
- A. parasiticum Cienkowski 1861
- A. recticola Chatton 1906