The first record of
Colpidium colpoda was in 1829 by Mathaeo Losana, who placed it in the genus
Paramaecia. It was more thoroughly described by
Christian Gottfried Ehrenberg in his two volume publication
Die Infusionsthierchen als vollkommene Organismen (which roughly translates to “The
Infusoria as Perfect Organisms”) in 1838. The species was described in detail by Ganner and Foissner in 1989. typically between 50 and 150 μm long. The cell is roughly oval or kidney-shaped in profile, with a distinct concavity on the
anterior of the oral side. Cilia are arranged in 50-63 longitudinal rows. At the center of the cell is a large, ovoid
macronucleus and a small spherical
micronucleus. A single contractile vacuole is located slightly posterior to the middle of the body, near the right side. Like many ciliates, it is a heterotrophic
bacterivore that ingests bacteria through an oral groove.
C. colpoda reproduces asexually every 4–6 hours, with variation in division rates arising from environmental conditions and the identity of the available bacterial food source. ==Phylogeny==