The dorsal side of
Kentrophoros is covered in a single layer of rod-shaped bacterial
symbionts. These bacteria gain their energy from
oxidizing sulfide, and unlike other sulfur-oxidizing symbionts, lack the genetic capacity to fix CO2 autotrophically into biomass; instead they appear to be entirely heterotrophic. The ciliates ingest the bacteria as their primary food source. This symbiosis has therefore been called a "
kitchen garden" carried by the ciliates to feed themselves. The symbionts occupy about 50% of the total volume. They belong to a group in the
Gammaproteobacteria for which the provisional name "
Candidatus Kentron" has been proposed. Similar symbioses between eukaryotic hosts and sulfur-oxidizing bacteria include the ciliate
Zoothamnium niveum, oligochaete worm
Olavius algarvensis, and flatworm
Paracatenula. == References ==