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Drawing from original description of Amphorides amphora as Tintinnus amphora from Claparède & Lachmann 1858 (Plate 8 figure 3).
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Claparède & Lachmann's 1858 figure from Plate 9 of Tintinnus quadrilineata, now known as Amphorides quadrilineata
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A common tintinnid ciliate in Mediterranean. It is about 150 microns long. Like other tintiinids, the ciliate cell which resembles an oligotrich ciliate is inside a shell or lorica. Tintinnids feed on phytoplankton, microscopic algae and in turn serve as food for larger plankton organisms such as copepods and fish larvae.
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Lugol's-fixed specimen from the Bay of Villefranche (43°41’10’’ N, 7°19’00’’ E) in Sept 2010.
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Living specimen from the Bay of Villefranche. The species is often found attached to a large diatom.
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From Daday 1887 described as Tintinnus inquilinus, Plate 18, fig. 2.
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The image shows 3 specimens of Eutintinnus fraknoii; 'normal, 'cytoplasm consumed by a parasite' and a lorica or shell full of newly formed parasites. All 3 specimens are from a sample taken at 50 meters depth at a station off the coast of Chile.
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Drawing from Plate 18, fig. 1; dimensions from text description page 582.
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Amphorellopsis quinquealata from the Admunsen Sea (Antarctica)
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Tintinnus quinquealata by Laackmann in 1907, now known as Amphorellopsis quinquealata.
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Amphorides laackmanni from near Villefranche-sur-Mer, found at 250 m depth on April 10 2017.
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Specimen from the of Indian Sundarbans, Jyotirampur.
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From Schmidt 1902, original description of Amphorella acuta, now known as Amphorellopsis acuta.
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Described by Brandt (1906-1907) as Tintinnus palliata, now known as Brandtiella palliata. Figure 1 from Plate 70.
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From the Tara Oceans Epedition, Station 78
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Specimen from the central Med. sampled in 2008 during the Boum cruise.
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Specimen from the Bay of Villefranche
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Drawing from the source, dimensions from those given in the text.
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Specimen from Jellyfish Lake on the island of Palau. Image by Beatriz Beker of the University of Brest.
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Specimen from Scripps Canyon area (Southern California) in July 2009.
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Drawing from Kofoid's 1905 original description as Tintinnus serratus
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The drawing from Ostenfeld 1899 (Fig. 2f) with dimensions added as given in the text (pg 439).
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Specimen from the NW Mediterranean Sea
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From Kofoid and Campbell (1929) page 330. Orginally described as Tintinnus turgenscens.