First report of antennular attachment organs in a barnacle nauplius larva

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Larvae released from Newmaniverruca albatrossiana were cultured in the laboratory until the cypris stage. The brood size of individuals was low, about 60 larvae per brood. The exact number of instars was not determined. Early instars had the morphology normally seen in lecithotrophic nauplii of thoracican cirripedes. They had uniramous antennules with a few apical setae and biramous antennae and mandibles equipped with natatory setae only. Neither antennae nor mandibles carried any enditic spines or setae and the mouth cone was diminutive. The last nauplius stage obtained in our cultures was typical except in the structure of antennules. The head shield was enlarged but not flexed down, the antennae and mandibles were virtually unchanged from earlier instars, and the ventral thoracic process was well developed but without any external appendages. In contrast, the antennules had the complex shape and segmentation otherwise seen only in cypris larvae, where they are used for bipedal walking on the substratum in search of a settlement site. The similarity included the specialized shape of the first two antennular segments and the specialization of the third as an attachment organ. Nauplii just prior to this last instar had simple, straight antennules but completely lacked setae and instead terminated bluntly in what appears to be an incipient attachment organ. The presence of cypris-like antennules in late nauplii has not previously been recorded in cirripedes. We suggest that this will allow the larvae to attach on the substratum temporarily before they reach the cypris instar and this will increase the chance of settling successfully on their rare substratum (sea urchin spines). The specialization in late N. albatrossiana nauplii will therefore decrease mortality during the larval phase and thus counterbalance the very low breeding potential in this deep-sea species
Udgivelsesdato: 2008
Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Zoology
Volume274
Issue number3
Pages (from-to)284-291
Number of pages7
ISSN0952-8369
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2008

Bibliographical note

Author Keywords: deep-sea; barnacles; larvae; sea urchin; epibiont; attachment organs
KeyWords Plus: SCANNING ELECTRON-MICROSCOPY; LIFE-CYCLE; CIRRIPEDIA; CRUSTACEA; RHIZOCEPHALA; THORACICA; REPRODUCTION; THECOSTRACA; HYPOTHESES; SETTLEMENT

ID: 10453729