The demarcation of boundaries between protist species is often problematic because of the absence
of a uniform species definition, the abundance of cryptic diversity, and the occurrence of convergent
morphology. The ciliates belonging to the Paramecium aurelia complex, consisting of 15 species, are a
good model for such systematic and evolutionary studies. One member of the complex is P. sonneborni,
previously known only from one stand in Texas (USA), but recently found in two new sampling sites
in Cyprus (creeks running to Salt Lake and Oroklini Lake near Larnaca). The studied Paramecium
sonneborni strains (from the USA and Cyprus) reveal low viability in the F1 and F2 generations of
interstrain hybrids and may be an example of ongoing allopatric speciation. Despite its molecular
distinctiveness, we postulate that P. sonneborni should remain in the P. aurelia complex, making it a
paraphyletic taxon. Morphological studies have revealed that some features of the nuclear apparatus
of P. sonneborni correspond to