Abstract
ABSTRACT. The clonal life history of ciliated protists is characterized by a sequence of phenotypes; sexual immaturity, maturity, and senescence. The distinctiveness of immaturity and maturity has been investigated. Standard assays of the onset of maturity of progeny clones from a cross between stocks EC1 and EC2 of Euplotes crassus demonstrated significant differences among clones and among testers within clones. They also revealed that the first positive test(s) of a progeny subclone were typically followed by at least one negative test. Special protocols were devised to investigate if maturity was reversible at the cellular level. In these experiments, the first mating pair of a progeny subclone was split before the consummation of mating. From these two cells as well as from control progeny and tester cells, subclones were established and every leftover cell was tested for maturity after each transfer. Both standard and split‐pair progeny subclones had immature and slow‐ to‐mate cells. The number of fissions before progeny exhibited sexual behavior indistinguishable from the testers was more than twice that to the first mating reaction of a subclone. At the first sign of maturity, progeny lines are a heterogeneous population of cells able and not able to mate, but remarkably, clonal descendants of those able to mate may become unable to mate. The development of maturity is progressive, quantitative and non‐monotonic rather than an instantaneous switch.
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