Abstract
The distribution of Loxodes magnus and L. striatus (Karyorelictida) was investigated in two eutrophic waters (Esthwaite Water and Priest Pot, English Lake District). In the benthos, these species were most abundant at the sediment surface, at deeper sites, and when the bottom water was oxygenated. In the plankton, in Priest Pot, they were found only in the oxygen deficient summer hypolimnion. Experimental studies suggested that L. magnus and L. striatus required access to oxygen. Loxodes was apparently excluded from the oxygenated Priest Pot epilimnion by several adverse factors, one of which was bright light. It was concluded that the ecology of L. magnus and L. striatus resembles, in many ways, that of the advanced ciliates which were found associated with Loxodes.
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