[1][3] The mucron is located at the anterior (apical) end of the cell and comprises the conoid, rhoptries, apical polar ring(s), and a large food vacuole (also called mucronal vacuole) having an outlet opening—a cytostome.
[4][5][6] The epimerites of some aseptate eugregarines superficially (at the light microscopic level) resemble mucron and are usually called in the same way.
[1][3][2] This widespread misunderstanding originated from the conventional definition first proposed by Levine in 1971: "[the mucron is] an attachment organelle of aseptate gregarines.
It is similar to an epimerite, but is not set off from the rest of the gregarine body by what appears under the light microscope to be a septum.
Note that the genuine epimerites are usually not separated by septa from the rest of the cell,[8][9] so this definition is misleading.