Reproductive biology of the red alga Polysiphonia lanosa (Ceramiales) in the Bay of Fundy, Canada

1997 ◽  
Vol 128 (4) ◽  
pp. 695-703 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Kaczmarska ◽  
L. L. Dowe
Author(s):  
D. Dean ◽  
S. R. Chapman ◽  
C. S. Chapman

There are 290 described species in the tube-dwelling family Sabellidae (Fauchald, 1977), but our knowledge of their reproductive biology is limited, in whole or in part, to no more than 30 species (McEuen, Wu & Chia, 1983; Knight-Jones & Bowden, 1984). In the monogeneric subfamily Myxicolinae, the diminutive Myxicola aesthetica (=dinardensis) (Claparède) is known to undergo scissiparity (Caullery & Mesnil, 1920; Okada, 1934; Knight-Jones & Bowden, 1984). For the larger species, M. infundibulum (Reinier), the only information on reproduction is: an illustration of the sperm (Claparede, 1870), the conclusion that it spawns during the autumn in the Bay of Fundy and adjacent waters (MacKay, 1977 a, b), and that autotomy has not been observed and regeneration is limited to the branchial plume (Wells, 1952).


1931 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 41-63
Author(s):  
A. BROOKER KLUGH

Pieces of the fronds of Enteromorpha linza, a green alga, growing just beneath the surface of the sea, of Porphyra umbilicalis, a red alga, of which the fronds of brownish-red colour which were growing on the side of a dock at half-tide level were selected, and of Delesseria sinuosa, a bright magenta-red alga from a depth of 18 metres in Passamaquoddy bay, were placed in vials of sea water (previously brought to pH 7 by the addition of KH2PO4), behind Corning red, green and blue filters, which had been brought to equal intensity in the photosynthetically active part of the spectrum, and exposed to sunshine. The gain in pH, due to the using up of CO2, was read at the end of 10 minute periods with a B.D.H. capillator set, and the photosynthetic rates for each species were determined by dividing the gain in pH (in hundredths of a unit) by the time. The photosynthetic rates of these three species in the different regions of the spectrum were very different, those of E. linza being red = 1.80; green = 0.16 and blue = 1.16, of P. umbilicalis red = 2.46; green and blue = 1.65, and of D. sinuosa red = 1.35; green = 1.25 and blue = 1.05. These data fit in very well with the transmission coefficients for red, green and blue light in the bay of Fundy at the place where the experiments were carried on, as green light penetrates best, blue next and red least.


2008 ◽  
Vol 65 (5) ◽  
pp. 730-741 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arthur C. Mathieson ◽  
Judith R. Pederson ◽  
Christopher D. Neefus ◽  
Clinton J. Dawes ◽  
Troy L. Bray

Abstract Mathieson, A. C., Pederson, J. R., Neefus, C. D., Dawes, C. J., and Bray, T. L. 2008. Multiple assessments of introduced seaweeds in the Northwest Atlantic. – ICES Journal of Marine Science, 65: 730–741. Historical and recent floristic studies, rapid assessment surveys, and molecular investigations were used to evaluate the occurrence of 20 seaweeds introduced to the Northwest Atlantic, including 2 green, 4 brown, and 14 red algae. Based on floristic comparisons of Mount Desert Island and Casco Bay, ME, from the late 1800s to the early 1900s, some initial records of seaweed introductions were documented, as well as increased numbers of non-indigenous taxa. Detailed floristic studies in southern ME and NH from the mid-1960s to 2007 have revealed expansive patterns for two Asiatic taxa (Codium fragile subsp. tomentosoides and Neosiphonia harveyi). Rapid assessment surveys conducted between the Bay of Fundy and Long Island, NY, during four summers (2002, 2004, 2005, and 2007) revealed seven introduced species and a recent expansion of the Asiatic red alga Grateloupia turuturu into the Gulf of Maine. Molecular evaluations confirmed the presence of several cryptic introduced species of Porphyra from Asia. A synopsis of the dates of introduction, probable vectors, and sources of these 20 introduced taxa in the Northwest Atlantic is given, as well as comparisons of numbers of non-indigenous taxa from other geographies.


Author(s):  
Alan N. Hodgson

The hermaphrodite duct of pulmonate snails connects the ovotestis to the fertilization pouch. The duct is typically divided into three zones; aproximal duct which leaves the ovotestis, the middle duct (seminal vesicle) and the distal ovotestis duct. The seminal vesicle forms the major portion of the duct and is thought to store sperm prior to copulation. In addition the duct may also play a role in sperm maturation and degredation. Although the structure of the seminal vesicle has been described for a number of snails at the light microscope level there appear to be only two descriptions of the ultrastructure of this tissue. Clearly if the role of the hermaphrodite duct in the reproductive biology of pulmonatesis to be understood, knowledge of its fine structure is required.Hermaphrodite ducts, both containing and lacking sperm, of species of the terrestrial pulmonate genera Sphincterochila, Levantina, and Helix and the marine pulmonate genus Siphonaria were prepared for transmission electron microscopy by standard techniques.


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