Skin-digging tanaids: the unusual parasitic behaviour of Exspina typica in Antarctic waters and worldwide deep basins

2011 ◽  
Vol 23 (4) ◽  
pp. 343-348 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Chiara Alvaro ◽  
Magdalena Błażewicz-Paszkowycz ◽  
Niki Davey ◽  
Stefano Schiaparelli

AbstractThe order Tanaidacea includes over 1000 species which are mainly free-living or tube-dwelling detritivores. Exspina typica Lang, 1968 represents an exception to these common life styles, having being found in the intestine and body cavity of deep sea holothuroids. The 2008 New Zealand ‘IPY-CAML Cruise’ held in the Ross Sea collected several deepwater holothuroids that were observed to carry specimens of E. typica inside their coelomic cavity. A clear interpretation of this association was hence possible. Even if E. typica shows slight adaptations to a parasitic life style, the tanaids were found to actively ‘dig’ into the host's skin, grasping tissue with their claws and producing tunnels in the body wall. It is therefore possible to clearly define this association, which is here reported from the Antarctic for the first time, as parasitism.

1995 ◽  
Vol 198 (6) ◽  
pp. 1381-1387 ◽  
Author(s):  
D Wharton ◽  
D Ferns

Animals are usually thought to survive ice formation in their bodies only if the ice is confined to the body cavity and to extracellular spaces. Intracellular ice formation is believed to be fatal. This conclusion is based on studies of the cryopreservation of mammalian cells. Intracellular freezing has been observed in some living insect cells but has not been observed in intact animals. Nematodes are transparent and so the location of ice in their bodies can be observed directly using a cryomicroscope stage. We have observed freezing and melting in all body compartments, including intracellular compartments, of the Antarctic nematode Panagrolaimus davidi. Inoculative freezing from the surrounding water occurs via the body openings, rather than across the cuticle; most frequently it occurs via the excretory pore. Individual nematodes that have frozen intracellularly will subsequently grow and reproduce in culture. Determining the mechanisms by which this nematode survives intracellular freezing could have important applications in the cryopreservation of a variety of biological materials.


Zoosymposia ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 44-70
Author(s):  
EMERIC GILLET ◽  
BERTRAND LEFEBVRE ◽  
VERONIQUE GARDIEN ◽  
EMILIE STEIMETZ ◽  
CHRISTOPHE DURLET ◽  
...  

Bolboporites is an enigmatic Ordovician cone-shaped fossil, the precise nature and systematic affinities of which have been controversial over almost two centuries. For the first time, a wide range of techniques (CT-scan, SEM, cathodoluminescence, XPL, UV epifluorescence, EBSD, FT-IR and XRF spectrometry) were applied to well-preserved specimens of Bolboporites from Norway and Russia. Our main finding confirms its echinoderm affinities, as shown by its stereomic microstructure and by the first definitive evidence of its monocrystalline nature. Each cone consists in a single, microporous calcitic crystal with a narrow longitudinal internal canal. These results are combined with all previous data on Bolboporites to critically discuss five alternative interpretations of this fossil, namely theca, basal cone, spine, columnal, and holdfast, respectively. The most parsimonious scenario considers Bolboporites as an isolated spine, which was articulated in life by a short biserial appendage to the body wall of an unknown echinoderm, possibly of echinozoan affinities.


2004 ◽  
Vol 82 (2) ◽  
pp. 194-210 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seth Tyler ◽  
Matthew Hooge

The soft-bodied nature of the platyhelminths is due largely to the structure of the body wall and its lack of sclerotic elements such as cuticle. Free-living members, i.e., most turbellarians, show considerable variety, but the basic form of the body wall comprises a simple ciliated epithelium overlying a network of muscles. We illustrate this body wall structure in a representative typhloplanoid rhabditophoran and discuss variations in representatives of the Acoela, Catenulida, and other free-living rhabditophorans. The major parasitic groups of platyhelminths, the rhabditophoran Neodermata, follow a developmental pattern that replaces a similar ciliated epidermis in a larval stage with a specialized epidermis called a neodermis, which is assumed to be key to their success as parasites. This neodermis consists of a syncytium that covers the body in a continuous sheet connected to perikarya that lie below the body wall musculature. The neodermis can be seen as a special adaptation of a developmental mechanism common to all platyhelminths, in which epidermal growth and renewal are accomplished by replacement cells originating beneath the body wall. The cell type responsible for all cell renewal, including body wall renewal, in platyhelminths is the neoblast, and its presence may be the one autapomorphic character that unites all taxonomic groups of platyhelminths.


2014 ◽  
Vol 51 (3) ◽  
pp. 236-245 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Quiazon ◽  
T. Yoshinaga ◽  
H. Doi ◽  
J. Araki ◽  
K. Ogawa

Abstract Finding male philometrid nematodes is essential for taxonomic identification among congeneric species. In this study, male Philometra thaiensis Moravec, Fiala et Dyková, 2004 were collected and described for the first time, from the body cavity of the freshwater fish (eyespot pufferfish) Tetraodon biocellatus Tirant (Tetraodontiformes, Tetraodontidae), and conspecific females were redescribed based on the additional morphological biometrics examined. Molecular examination was carried out on the small subunit 18S rRNA, revealing the evolutionary relationships of P. thaiensis and reported philometrid species (Philometra and Philometroides) from Japan with other dracunculoids deposited in the GenBank. Based on the molecular data, there are some genera (Philometra, Philometroides, Clavinema, and Margolisianum [genus inquirendum]) requiring further morphological re-evaluation that should be supported with molecular data.


1979 ◽  
Vol 57 (1) ◽  
pp. 161-178 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. R. Baker

Free-living development of Rhabdias americanus and Rhabdias ranae was heterogonic and development of infective larvae was by matricidal endotoky. Both species were experimentally transmitted by skin penetration. Development of R. americanus in Bufo americanus and R. ranae in Rana sylvatica was similar. Growth of third- and fourth-stage larvae occurred in fascia and muscle tissue of the host during migration to the body cavity. Adult worms were recovered only from the body cavity and lungs; larvae were never observed in these locations. Worms probably entered the lungs by direct penetration. Gravid nematodes were observed only in the lungs. Both R. americanus and R. ranae were transmitted to toad and frog tadpoles, respectively, and worms developed to adulthood in tadpoles. Terrestrial snails (Oxyloma decampi Tryon and Discus cronkhitei Newcomb) were demonstrated as possible paratenic hosts for R. americanus. Rhabdias americanus, which does not occur in frogs, and R. ranae, which does not occur in toads in the wild at Guelph, were experimentally cross-transmitted to these amphibians and developed successfully to adults. Infective larvae of these species, however, did not as readily penetrate into the unusual host as the usual host. It is suggested that ecological barriers have prevented cross infections in the wild.


Fossil Record ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 105-115 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andris Bukejs ◽  
Jan Bezděk ◽  
Vitalii I. Alekseev ◽  
Kristaps Kairišs ◽  
Ryan C. McKellar

Abstract. A male representative of the extinct species Calomicrus eocenicus Bukejs et Bezděk, 2014 (Chrysomelidae: Galerucinae) is found and described for the first time from Eocene Baltic amber using X-ray microtomography. The aedeagus is well preserved within the body cavity of the specimen, and it is illustrated in detail. This fossil species exhibits distinct sexual dimorphism: the male has a smaller total body size, as well as a copula-adapted modification in abdominal ventrite 5 (apical margin deeply trilobed, with round medial fovea present); meanwhile the female is larger in body size and has a simple abdominal ventrite 5 (without fovea, non-incised and widely rounded apically). Similar sexually dimorphic characters are typical for extant members of the tribe Luperini, and this report is the first time that they are described in an Eocene species. The known sexually dimorphic characters present in Coleoptera within Eocene Baltic amber are briefly discussed.


1986 ◽  
Vol 125 (1) ◽  
pp. 137-155 ◽  
Author(s):  
Timothy Z. Vitalis ◽  
William K. Milsom

Measurements of pulmonary mechanics on anaesthetized specimens of the aquatic turtle Pseudemys scripta (Schoepff) indicate that the static pulmonary mechanics of the total respiratory system are determined primarily by the mechanics of the body wall rather than those of the lungs. This is also true under the dynamic conditions of pump ventilation at low pump frequencies. As pump frequency increases, the work required to inflate the multicameral lungs of the turtle begins to contribute an increasing portion to the total mechanical work required to produce each breath as measured from pressure volume loops. The rise in the work performed on the lungs results from an increase in the non-elastic, flow-resistive forces which must be overcome during ventilation. The primary bronchus to each lung is the most likely site of flow resistance. There is also a small elastic component to the work required to ventilate the lungs associated with movement of the intrapulmonary septa and the striated muscle surrounding the lungs. The contribution of the work required to distend the body cavity as a percentage of the total mechanical work required to generate each breath remains relatively unchanged with increasing ventilation frequency, indicating that the majority of the forces to be overcome in the body wall are elastic in nature. For a constant rate of minute pump ventilation, as frequency increases, the work done per minute to overcome elastic forces decreases, while that done to overcome non-elastic forces begins to rise. These opposing trends produce an optimum combination of pump volume and frequency at which the rate of mechanical work is minimum.


1945 ◽  
Vol s2-85 (340) ◽  
pp. 343-389
Author(s):  
KARM NARAYAN BAHL

1. In an earthworm, as in most aquatic invertebrates, urea and ammonia form the main bulk of nitrogenous excretion and there is no trace of uric acid. These excretory products are first formed in the body-wall and gut-wall, pass therefrom into the coelomic fluid and blood, and are thence eliminated to the exterior by the nephridia. In Pheretima urea and ammonia pass out from the nephridia to the exterior either directly through the skin or through the two ends of the gut. 2. Ammonia and urea have been estimated for the first time in the blood, coelomic fluid, and urine of the earthworm. It has been shown that blood is not a mere carrier of oxygen, as Rogers believed, but that it also takes part in carrying urea and ammonia from the body-wall and gut-wall to the nephridia. The blood of the earthworm does not coagulate, indicating absence of fibrinogen. 3. The role of the nephridia in excretion and osmotic regulation has been determined. A comparison of the osmotic pressures of blood, coelomic fluid, and urine shows that the coelomic fluid is hypotonic to the blood, and that urine is markedly hypotonic both to the blood and coelomic fluid. The protein and chloride contents of the blood, coelomic fluid, and urine have been determined with a view to elucidate the differences in their osmotic pressures. It has been found that the urine contains the merest trace of protein, but that the amount of proteins in the blood is about eight times that contained in the plasma of the coelomic fluid. On the contrary, the chloride content of the coelomic fluid-plasma is about 60 per cent, higher than that of the blood-plasma. 4. The part of urine which is excreted from the blood is probably a protein-free filtrate, but the nephridia reabsorb all the proteins passing into them with the coelomic fluid-plasma. Similarly, there is a reabsorption of chlorides on a large scale from the initial nephridial filtrate during its passage through the nephridia. 5. A convenient method has been devised for collecting urine of the earthworm, which has made it possible to collect as much as 25 c.c. of urine in two and a half hours. The rate of excretion of the urine has been determined and it has been found that in an earthworm living in water the outflow of urine in twenty-four hours must be more than 45 per cent, of its body-weight. 6. It seems that an earthworm, when submerged in water, can live like a fresh water animal, and its gut acts as an osmoregulatory organ in addition to the nephridia, but in the soil it lives like a terrestrial animal and the osmo-regulatory function is adequately discharged by the nephridia alone which reabsorb chlorides and proteins, and are also active in the conservation of water. In Pheretima and other earthworms with an enteronephric type of nephridial system, the gut takes a prominent part in reabsorbing the water of the nephridial fluid and conserving water to its maximum extent. 7. The phagocytic section (ciliated middle tube) believed by Schneider to be absent in the nephridia of Pheretima has been shown to be distinctly present; it is also present in the nephridia of Lampito , Eutyphoeus, and Tonoscolex. The brownish yellow granules characteristic of this phagocytic section form a heavy deposit in the septal nephridia of Pheretima posthuma, heavier than that described in Lumbricus. The deposit increases with the age of the earthworm and forms a ‘storage excretory product’. 8. Spectroscopic examination has revealed that these brownish yellow granules, so far believed to be of guanine, are really blood-pigment granules, since a pyridine solution of them shows the two characteristic bands of haemochromogen. With regard to the blood-pigment, the nephridia function as ‘storage kidneys’. 9. The mechanism of nephridial excretion of the earthworm can be analysed into processes of filtration, reabsorption, and chemical transformation. 10. It is probable that the dorsal and ventral phagocytic organs of earthworms are additional excretory organs.


Polar Record ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 55 (6) ◽  
pp. 452-459
Author(s):  
Nikolai B. Korostelev ◽  
Elena V. Vedishcheva ◽  
Alexei M. Orlov

AbstractAge and growth of blue antimora Antimora rostrata were examined for the first time in the waters of Kerguelen and Crozet Islands (southern Indian Ocean, sub-Antarctic). The longline catches were represented by fish ranging from 39 to 72 cm in total length with weights between 400 and 3310 g, aged 16– 41 years. A minimum age of 16 years was observed in a fish 39 cm long, while a maximum age of 41 years was recorded for an individual of 70 cm in length and 3310 g in weight. The age classes with the greatest numbers were represented by fish aged 34 years (9%), 28 years (9%) and 29 years (8%), which together accounted for 26% of the total catch. The blue antimora in the southern Indian Ocean shows similar growth rates to those of individual fish from the Ross, Lazarev and Weddell Seas and southeastern Greenland, which may indicate the population unity of the species within the Antarctic and sub-Antarctic waters or similar habitat conditions in these areas.


1881 ◽  
Vol 32 (212-215) ◽  
pp. 1-11 ◽  

In Holothuria the polian vesicle opens freely into a wide circular canal a short distance from the termination of the stone canal. From this circular canal five lozenge-shaped sinuses project forwards, and from each of these two large oval sinuses run forward parallel with each other─the ten oval sinuses becoming continuous with the hollow stems of the tentacles. Injection of the polian vesicle shows that it forms one continuous tube system with the circular canal and its sinuses, oval sinuses and tentacles, ampullæ and pedicels. Unless the pressure is kept up for a considerable time there is no penetration of the injected fluid into the stone canal, and either the ring, the vesicle, or a sinus gives way before the fluid reaches the madreporic plate. Specimens injected with a gelatine mass show that each canal sinus opens into a cæcal tube, which runs forwards internal to the sinuses of the tentacles as far as a wide circum-oral space. This space communicates by well-defined apertures with that portion of the body cavity which lies between the sinuses and the œsophagus, and which is reached through the circular apertures between the sinuses of the circular canal. Each canal sinus has three other apertures in its walls. It opens by a small round aperture into a radial canal, and the two other apertures occur as minute slits, one at each side of the orifice of the radial canal leading into the adjacent tentacle sinuses. When the tentacle into which the sinus opens is protruded, there is no constriction between the sinus and the tentacle ; but when the ten­tacle is retracted, there is a well-marked constriction at the junction of the sinus with the tentacle. The eversion of the perisome and the protrusion of the tentacles are effected chiefly by the shortening of the polian vesicle and the constriction of the longitudinal muscular bands, which run from the inner surface of the body wall between each two adjacent tentacle-sinuses ; but the circular fibres of the body wall also assist in the process by contracting immediately behind the group of sinuses, so as to act on them by direct pressure, and also indirectly by forcing the body fluid against them.


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