Life history and iodine nutrition of the marine brown alga, Petalonia fascia (O. F. Müll.) Kuntze

1969 ◽  
Vol 47 (10) ◽  
pp. 1611-1616 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen I. C. Hsiao

The morphological life history of the marine brown alga, Petalonia fascia (O. F. Müll.) Kuntze, has been investigated in unialgal culture, using defined culture media with different iodide concentrations. The zoospores produced from the plurilocular sporangia of P. fascia blades developed directly into protonemata, plethysmothalli, or Ralfsia-like thalli, depending upon the iodide concentration. Protonemata and plethysmothalli survived in iodide-free media. For development of Ralfsia-like thalli and blades the minimal iodide concentrations required were 50.76 × 102 μg/1 and 50.76 × 101 μg/1, respectively. Iodine appears to be an essential element for growth, morphogenesis, and reproduction of P. fascia.

Phycologia ◽  
1966 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 261-273 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ian R. Price ◽  
Sophie C. Ducker
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tifeng Shan ◽  
Shaojun Pang

Undaria pinnatifida is the commercially second most important brown alga in the world. Its global annual yield has been more than two million tonnes since 2012. It is extensively cultivated in East Asia, mainly consumed as food but also used as feed for aquacultural animals and raw materials for extraction of chemicals applicable in pharmaceutics and cosmetics. Cultivar breeding, which is conducted on the basis of characteristics of the life history, plays a pivotal role in seaweed farming industry. The common basic life history shared by kelps determines that their cultivar breeding strategies are similar. Cultivar breeding and cultivation methods of U. pinnatifida have usually been learned or directly transferred from those of Saccharina japonica. However, recent studies have revealed certain peculiarity in the life history of U. pinnatifida. In this article, we review the studies relevant to cultivar breeding in this alga, including the peculiar component of the life history, and the genetics, transcriptomics and genomics tools available, as well as the main cultivar breeding methods. Then we discuss the prospects of cultivar breeding based on our understanding of this kelp and what we can learn from the model brown alga and land crops.


Parasitology ◽  
1919 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 127-146 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Ward Cutler

1. Observations on E. histolytica from the human intestine have been made and compared with amoebae living in culture media and in the ulcers of the large intestines of cats, which have died of amoebic dysentery.2. The effects of the substances chlorine, tyrosin, and skatol on culture amoebae have been investigated; it has been found that the two first substances stimulate vegetative reproduction, but that skatol induces cyst formation.3. The changes that the nucleus undergoes preparatory to division and the behaviour of the karyosome during division are fully described. It is shown that the nuclei originally described as characteristic of E. histolytica and E. tetragena are phases of nuclear change in the life history of the same animal.4. Cyst formation and the nuclear divisions in the cysts are described, together with a short discussion as to the view taken that the chromatoid bodies are not comparable with the chromidia of other Rhizopoda.5. Reasons are adduced for the suggestion that during the further development of the cysts quadrinucleate amoebae emerge, which divide to form four small amoebulae.6. Degeneration in E. histolylica is described and the view of Darling, that budding phenomena are degenerative ones, is confirmed.


Parasitology ◽  
1933 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 296-307 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. W. Otter

1. Accurate measurements were made of adults, larvae and eggs of Rhabditis pellio, representing an average selection for comparison with Johnson's figures.2. The most satisfactory method of culturing the nematodes was in hanging drops, in a medium free from an excess of putrefying bacteria.3. A medium poor in food was found to prolong life (up to 40 days), while a rich medium quickened up the life processes thereby causing death sooner. It is probably partial starvation which prevents the larvae from becoming mature while in the living earthworm.4. In a medium favourable for prolonging life, the males were found to live about one-third as long as the females (F generation). It is probable that the females only live for about 4–8 days in a decaying earthworm after attaining maturity.5. The maximum number of eggs laid per female was 257 (F generation) and 197 (F1 generation). It is probable that between 150 and 300 eggs are laid per female in the natural state. No information was obtained regarding the effect of the various media on egg production.6. In most cases the females died when spent of eggs.7. Vivipary is considered to be due to a favourable environment probably aided by a high temperature.8. Larvae were found to be more susceptible to cultural conditions than the adults, especially those (F generation) which were not bred from females in culture media. The growth-rate of F1 generation larvae was found to be slightly faster in a natural medium, such as earthworm broth, than in peptone.9. The chief food is considered to be bacteria.10. During this work R. pellio behaved entirely as a bisexual species. A few cases of copulation were observed, showing that some of the males had not lost their “sexual instinct.”11. Rhabditis pellio is considered to be a species in which hermaphroditism is just commencing and in which true males and females exist together with hermaphrodite females whose numbers fluctuate, the degree of hermaphroditism possibly bearing some relation to the sex ratio.12. The sex ratio was about 1 ♂: 2 ♀♀, in both the F and F1 generations, but varied considerably. There were a few cases in which the male proportion was equal, or higher, than the female.13. Four different species of British earthworms were examined, each being infected by Rhabditis pellio to a varying extent. Eisenia foetida was, however, rarely infected. Size of the earthworm, in proportion, played no part regarding the degree of infection. There is an indication that the head (segment I to the beginning of the clytellum) is the most heavily infected region.14. A few specimens (larval stage) of an Ascarid, a species of Porrocaecum, a parasite of small mammals and birds, were found in three of the species of earthworms examined.15. A probable course of the life history is given, based on this work and that of Johnson (1913).


Planta Medica ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 75 (09) ◽  
Author(s):  
AO Santos ◽  
EA Britta ◽  
T Ueda-Nakamura ◽  
BP Dias Filho ◽  
EM Bianco ◽  
...  

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