On 25 November, 1993, a stranded juvenile
pygmy sperm whale was rescued from near
Brigantine, New Jersey and brought to the National Aquarium of Baltimore. The whale was rehabilitated and released to the
Gulf Stream from Florida on 5 May, 1994. Throughout its six month-long rehabilitation, mucus samples of its blowhole were monitored for microbes, blood cells, and epithelial cells. Among the samples, the new kinetoplastid species was discovered and continuously reported across the months.
Jarrellia atramenti was first identified as a
bodonid kinetoplastid. Due to its similarities to the bodonid
genera Trypanoplasma and
Cryptobia and its unique combination of cellular features, it was proposed as a separate genus. Its description was considered the first published report of a flagellate isolated from a marine
mammal, and among the first reports of trypanoplasm-like kinetoplastids from
warm-blooded hosts; they were previously considered unable to survive the elevated body temperature of mammals. due to its superficial resemblance to
Trypanoplasma. However, it was eventually classified as an
incertae sedis kinetoplastid, as no reliable evidence supports its assignment to one of the orders. ==References==