Evolutionary modification of gastrulation in Parvulastra exigua , an asterinid seastar with holobenthic lecithotrophic development

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Byrne ◽  
Paulina Selvakumaraswamy
2006 ◽  
Vol 36 (3) ◽  
pp. 375-380 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marlon Aguiar Melo ◽  
Fernando Abrunhosa ◽  
Iracilda Sampaio

Previous study on the resistance of larvae of Sesarma curacaoense submitted to starvation has revealed a facultative lecithotrophy during zoeal stages, but megalopa and first juvenile stages are exclusively feeding stages. In the present study, the gross morphology and fine structure of the foregut of S. curacaoense were investigated during larval, megalopa and first juvenile stages. The foregut of the zoea I show specific setae and a filter press apparently functional. The foregut undergoes changes in the zoea II (last larval stage) with increment of setae number, mainly on the cardiopyloric valve and complexity of the filter press. After metamorphosis to megalopa stage the foregut become rather complex, with a gastric mill supporting a medial and two lateral teeth well-developed. The foregut of the first juvenile is more specialized compared to the previous stage, showing similar characteristics of the decapod adults. These results provide further evidence of facultative lecithotrophic development in the larvae of S. curacaoense.


Author(s):  
Graham Walker

Heterosaccus lunatus parasitizes the portunid crab, Charybdis callianassa, in Moreton Bay, Queensland, Australia. Larval broods, released during July and August (males only), were allowed to develop through to cyprids (lecithotrophic development). Speeds of all the developmental stages—nauplius I to nauplius IV and the cyprids were measured by timing continuously swimming larvae over 5 mm distances under a microscope. The absolute speeds of the naupliar stages were similar (3–4 mm s−1), but the cyprids were significantly faster at ≈10 mm s−1. These speeds were compared with published speeds of cirripede and copepod nauplii and other cirripede cyprids. Relative speeds (body lengths s−1) showed surprising parity, which for the cyprids probably reflects the similar efficiency of the fusiform shape and thoracopod propulsion for all sizes of this highly specialized larval form. The lecithotrophic H. lunatus nauplii have rather minimalistic appendages (compared with planktotrophic nauplii) which were examined at the light microscope and scanning electron microscope levels. The natatory setae were found to be plumo-denticulate.


Author(s):  
Yuki Ozaki ◽  
Yoichi Yusa ◽  
Shigeyuki Yamato ◽  
Tohru Imaoka

The sexuality of large (non-dwarf) individuals and the characteristics of eggs, larvae and dwarf males were investigated in the pedunculate barnacle Scalpellum stearnsii. All 103 large individuals collected in this study were not hermaphrodites but females. The major length axis of the egg was on average 0.50 mm, which was larger than that in most thoracican barnacles with planktotrophic larvae. The larvae hatched as nauplii and metamorphosed into cyprids without feeding (i.e. lecithotrophic development). There was a positive relationship between body weight and egg mass weight in ovigerous females. The number of males attached per female ranged from 0 to 35 (average: 5.9) and there was a positive relationship between the number of males and female body weight. The distribution of dwarf males was skewed significantly towards the lower part of the occludent margin, which is near the fertilization site.


PeerJ ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
pp. e7810 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cameron R.S. Thompson ◽  
David M. Fields ◽  
Reidun M. Bjelland ◽  
Vera B.S. Chan ◽  
Caroline M.F. Durif ◽  
...  

The copepod Lepeophtheirus salmonis is an obligate ectoparasite of salmonids. Salmon lice are major pests in salmon aquaculture and due to its economic impact Lepeophtheirus salmonis is one of the most well studied species of marine parasite. However, there is limited understanding of how increased concentration of pCO2 associated with ocean acidification will impact host-parasite relationships. We investigated the effects of increased pCO2 on growth and metabolic rates in the planktonic stages, rearing L. salmonis from eggs to 12 days post hatch copepodids under three treatment levels: Control (416 µatm), Mid (747 µatm), and High (942 µatm). The pCO2 treatment had a significant effect on oxygen consumption rate with the High treatment animals exhibiting the greatest respiration. The treatments did not have a significant effect on the other biological endpoints measured (carbon, nitrogen, lipid volume, and fatty acid content). The results indicate that L. salmonis have mechanisms to compensate for increased concentration of pCO2and that populations will be tolerant of projected future ocean acidification scenarios. The work reported here also describes catabolism during the lecithotrophic development of L. salmonis, information that is not currently available to parameterize models of dispersal and viability of the planktonic free-living stages.


2020 ◽  
Vol 641 ◽  
pp. 123-134
Author(s):  
LN Zamora ◽  
NJ Delorme ◽  
M Byrne ◽  
MA Sewell

The eggs of echinoderms with lecithotrophic development provide structural and nutritional materials (lipids, proteins) to complete development without any external sources of nutrition. Previous studies have suggested that a relatively large proportion of the maternal lipid reserves remain after settlement to provision the early post-metamorphic juvenile. Here we examined lipid and protein utilization during lecithotrophic development of the asterinid starfish Stegnaster inflatus which has large (~400 µm diameter), negatively buoyant eggs. S. inflatus produces eggs with a large amount of lipid (mean ± SD: 2047 ± 315 ng egg-1), with 26% structural lipids and 74% energetic lipids dominated by diacylglycerol ether (DAGE; 66%). Similar amounts of protein were present in the egg (mean ± SD: 2143 ± 157 ng egg-1), with a lipid:protein ratio of 0.96. Approximately 80% of the egg protein is used prior to settlement. In contrast, 51.0% of the energetic lipids provided in the egg, and 40.3% of the DAGE remain for provisioning of the early juvenile. A review of lecithotrophic development in echinoderms reveals that asteroid, echinoid and ophiuroid species have an excess of 50% of the maternal lipids remaining in the settled post-larva. When considering maternal investment in offspring for lecithotrophic developers, we need to consider energetic use during the short dispersal period, as well as provisioning for post-metamorphic early juvenile life.


1975 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. 371 ◽  
Author(s):  
DHC Williams ◽  
DT Anderson

H. erythrogramma has an annual reproductive cycle, spawning asynchronously. The female cycle has five phases: resting, regenerating, mature, spent and regressing; the male cycle omits the regression phase. Regression and resting occur only during April-August; regeneration begins in September; during December-March individual urchins pass through the mature, spent and regenerating phases two or three times. The egg averages 400 �m diameter and floats at the water surface. At 24-25�C, equal, total, radial cleavage yields a wrinkled coeloblastula by 6-7 hours; this undergoes egression, becoming a spherical stereoblastula by 13-14 hours; during this process an acellular central yolk mass is segregated from a peripheral columnar blastoderm. The ciliated stereoblastula gastrulates by a typical diphasic invagination, beginning at 15 hours, and the gastrulating embryo hatches as a ciliated, planktonic yolk-larva at 15-16 hours. Lecithotrophic development of the yolk-larva to a uniformly ciliated, planktonic vitellaria is complete by 1.5 days, and the larva metamorphoses gradually to a lecithotrophic juvenile over the next 3.5 days. It remains planktonic during the first half of this period (to 3.75 days), but settles during the second half (to 5 days). The juvenile begins to feed >3 weeks after settling. Vegetally proliferating mesenchyme invades the yolk mass during gastrulation. Invagination of the archenteron is followed by evagination of a primary pair of coelomic pouches from its wall; the left enterocoel forms the hydrocoel. Other coelomic cavities are re-formed by schizocoely. The larval gut rudiment temporarily loses connection with the exterior after the blastopore closes. The proctodaeum and stomodaeum of the juvenile form secondarily during and after metamorphosis. Ectodermal development of the echinus rudiment, though gradual, is typical of echinoids. The blastulation of H. evythrogramma is unique among large-egged echinoderms in combining egression of a wrinkled coeloblastula with segregation of a blastoderm around a central yolk mass. The development of the species supports the view that the vitellaria larva is secondarily evolved within the Echinoidea.


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