Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 May 2009
Chrysochromulina minor and C. kappa have been re-investigated by means of electron microscopy of thin sections to add details of the microanatomy of pyrenoids and haptonemata, and by anoptral contrast light microscopy to study pyrenoids in living cells. In both species the pyrenoid is in the form of a diverticulum projecting from the centre of the inner face of a plastid and, in C. minor, strongly flexed to lie along it. In C. kappa the pyrenoid is commonly enveloped by the nucleus which may conceal it entirely from view in life. Some details of the behaviour of the surface membranes of plastids and pyrenoids in relation to that of the nucleus are given. The haptonema structure in both species is shown to be comparable to that of others in which this appendage is much longer, though an occasional variant with eight instead of seven central fibres or tubes has been encountered in C. kappa and is demonstrated. The presence of ‘peculiar’ Golgi structure is reported for both species and demonstrated for C. kappa. Some direct evidence indicating an internal origin of scales from vesicles is demonstrated in C. minor. Finally a summary is given of salient structural criteria for all the described species attributed to this genus from the marine plankton, the closest agreement as regards pyrenoid structure in the two species under investigation being with C. chiton.