External appearance Cells of
C. marina are rounded on the right side and flattened on the left side, resembling the shape of a "D". The cell body is 3–4 μm wide and 5–6 μm long, making it a
nanoflagellate by size. The cellular surface is smooth, without any features (no
lorica,
cell wall, etc.) visible by
light or
scanning electron microscopy. Like other
bicosoecids, they have two smooth
flagella (anterior and posterior), with an equal length of around 1.5–2 times the length of the cell body. The flagella are in a sub-apical position and emerge from a dent on the
ventral side. this is the first time that a full connection between these
compartments has been described. Various functions for this peculiar connection have been
hypothesized: :(i) enabling the exchange of
ATP/
ADP between the two
organelles, thereby providing the high energy needed by the nucleus, :(ii) facilitating the transport of necessary nuclear
tRNA that the mitochondria cannot produce, :(iii) transporting
mRNA to be
translated in the mitochondria, :(iv) equally segregating mitochondria to the daughter cells after
mitosis, :(v) or simply a more efficient use of the limited space in a small cell size. but in the case of
Cafileria the mechanism responsible is unknown. Several small
vesicles are scattered across the
cytosol, while
food vacuoles are considerably larger and are localized in the posterior part of the cell, occupying almost one third of its volume. Some of the food vacuoles can contain intact or partially digested
bacteria.
Flagellar apparatus C. marina has its two flagella attached to four roots made of
microtubules. There are two
basal bodies, in the anterior (front) part of the cell, at a 45° angle to each other, connected to each other through a striated fiber. The flagella each have an
axoneme structure with two central microtubules and a circle of nine microtubules around them. The four roots (named R1, R2, R3 and R4) have 8, 3, 1, and 1 microtubules respectively, an arrangement unique to
C. marina. ==Ecology and cell behavior==