Morphology Moramonas marocensis is a species of
jakobids, single-celled
protists that move using two
flagella and have a ventral groove for feeding on
bacteria. Each cell is naked (without the
lorica present in some other jakobids), elliptical, 7–13 μm long and 3–5 μm wide. They can form spherical
cysts, 5–6 μm in diameter, with a smooth amorphous envelope surrounding them. The two flagella arise on the anterior side of the cell. The anterior one (13–14 μm long) propels the cell, which swims freely in a usually straight trajectory while rotating around its own axis. The posterior flagellum (16–22 μm long) undulates in the ventral groove and has a vane with striations; its role in cell movement is unclear. The posterior flagellum has a 2.5 μm long
acroneme (visibly thinner tip). Its contractile vacuole distinguishes this species from marine jakobids, and it differs from the closely related
Reclinomonas and
Histiona by the absence of a lorica. Among all jakobids, the paranuclear body found in
M. marocensis is only observed in
Andalucia godoyi. Lastly, the presence of three spherical mitochondria is unique, as no other studied jakobids have three or more mitochondria. == Taxonomy ==