Cirripede Cypris Antennules: How Much Structural Variation Exists Among Balanomorphan Species from Hard-Bottom Habitats?

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Standard

Cirripede Cypris Antennules : How Much Structural Variation Exists Among Balanomorphan Species from Hard-Bottom Habitats? / Chan, Benny K. K.; Sari, Alireza; Høeg, Jens Thorvald.

In: Biological Bulletin, Vol. 233, No. 2, 2017, p. 135-143.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Chan, BKK, Sari, A & Høeg, JT 2017, 'Cirripede Cypris Antennules: How Much Structural Variation Exists Among Balanomorphan Species from Hard-Bottom Habitats?', Biological Bulletin, vol. 233, no. 2, pp. 135-143. https://doi.org/10.1086/695689

APA

Chan, B. K. K., Sari, A., & Høeg, J. T. (2017). Cirripede Cypris Antennules: How Much Structural Variation Exists Among Balanomorphan Species from Hard-Bottom Habitats? Biological Bulletin, 233(2), 135-143. https://doi.org/10.1086/695689

Vancouver

Chan BKK, Sari A, Høeg JT. Cirripede Cypris Antennules: How Much Structural Variation Exists Among Balanomorphan Species from Hard-Bottom Habitats? Biological Bulletin. 2017;233(2):135-143. https://doi.org/10.1086/695689

Author

Chan, Benny K. K. ; Sari, Alireza ; Høeg, Jens Thorvald. / Cirripede Cypris Antennules : How Much Structural Variation Exists Among Balanomorphan Species from Hard-Bottom Habitats?. In: Biological Bulletin. 2017 ; Vol. 233, No. 2. pp. 135-143.

Bibtex

@article{a0aa27de55474fbe91557f3a2d9610cb,
title = "Cirripede Cypris Antennules: How Much Structural Variation Exists Among Balanomorphan Species from Hard-Bottom Habitats?",
abstract = "Barnacle cypris antennules are important for substratum attachment during settlement and on through metamorphosis from the larval stage to sessile adult. Studies on the morphology of cirripede cyprids are mostly qualitative, based on descriptions from images obtained using a scanning electron microscope (SEM). To our knowledge, our study is the first to use scanning electron microscopy to quantify overall structural diversity in cypris antennules by measuring 26 morphological parameters, including the structure of sensory organs. We analyzed cyprids from seven species of balanomorphan barnacles inhabiting rocky shore communities; for comparison, we also included a sponge-inhabiting balanomorphan and a verrucomorphan species. Multivariate analysis of the structural parameters resulted in two distinct clusters of species. From nonmetric multidimensional scaling plots, the sponge-inhabiting Balanus spongicola and Verruca stroemia formed one cluster, while the other balanomorphan species, all from hard bottoms, grouped together in the other cluster. The shape of the attachment disk on segment 3 is the key parameter responsible for the separation into two clusters. The present results show that species from a coastal hard-bottom habitat may share a nearly identical antennular structure that is distinct from barnacles from other habitats, and this finding supports the fact that such species also have rather similar reactions to substratum cues during settlement. Any differences that may be found in settlement biology among such species must therefore be due either to differences in the properties of their adhesive mechanisms or to the way that sensory stimuli are detected by virtually identical setae and processed into settlement behavior by the cyprid.",
author = "Chan, {Benny K. K.} and Alireza Sari and H{\o}eg, {Jens Thorvald}",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.1086/695689",
language = "English",
volume = "233",
pages = "135--143",
journal = "Biological Bulletin",
issn = "0006-3185",
publisher = "Marine Biological Laboratory",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Cirripede Cypris Antennules

T2 - How Much Structural Variation Exists Among Balanomorphan Species from Hard-Bottom Habitats?

AU - Chan, Benny K. K.

AU - Sari, Alireza

AU - Høeg, Jens Thorvald

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - Barnacle cypris antennules are important for substratum attachment during settlement and on through metamorphosis from the larval stage to sessile adult. Studies on the morphology of cirripede cyprids are mostly qualitative, based on descriptions from images obtained using a scanning electron microscope (SEM). To our knowledge, our study is the first to use scanning electron microscopy to quantify overall structural diversity in cypris antennules by measuring 26 morphological parameters, including the structure of sensory organs. We analyzed cyprids from seven species of balanomorphan barnacles inhabiting rocky shore communities; for comparison, we also included a sponge-inhabiting balanomorphan and a verrucomorphan species. Multivariate analysis of the structural parameters resulted in two distinct clusters of species. From nonmetric multidimensional scaling plots, the sponge-inhabiting Balanus spongicola and Verruca stroemia formed one cluster, while the other balanomorphan species, all from hard bottoms, grouped together in the other cluster. The shape of the attachment disk on segment 3 is the key parameter responsible for the separation into two clusters. The present results show that species from a coastal hard-bottom habitat may share a nearly identical antennular structure that is distinct from barnacles from other habitats, and this finding supports the fact that such species also have rather similar reactions to substratum cues during settlement. Any differences that may be found in settlement biology among such species must therefore be due either to differences in the properties of their adhesive mechanisms or to the way that sensory stimuli are detected by virtually identical setae and processed into settlement behavior by the cyprid.

AB - Barnacle cypris antennules are important for substratum attachment during settlement and on through metamorphosis from the larval stage to sessile adult. Studies on the morphology of cirripede cyprids are mostly qualitative, based on descriptions from images obtained using a scanning electron microscope (SEM). To our knowledge, our study is the first to use scanning electron microscopy to quantify overall structural diversity in cypris antennules by measuring 26 morphological parameters, including the structure of sensory organs. We analyzed cyprids from seven species of balanomorphan barnacles inhabiting rocky shore communities; for comparison, we also included a sponge-inhabiting balanomorphan and a verrucomorphan species. Multivariate analysis of the structural parameters resulted in two distinct clusters of species. From nonmetric multidimensional scaling plots, the sponge-inhabiting Balanus spongicola and Verruca stroemia formed one cluster, while the other balanomorphan species, all from hard bottoms, grouped together in the other cluster. The shape of the attachment disk on segment 3 is the key parameter responsible for the separation into two clusters. The present results show that species from a coastal hard-bottom habitat may share a nearly identical antennular structure that is distinct from barnacles from other habitats, and this finding supports the fact that such species also have rather similar reactions to substratum cues during settlement. Any differences that may be found in settlement biology among such species must therefore be due either to differences in the properties of their adhesive mechanisms or to the way that sensory stimuli are detected by virtually identical setae and processed into settlement behavior by the cyprid.

U2 - 10.1086/695689

DO - 10.1086/695689

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 29373061

VL - 233

SP - 135

EP - 143

JO - Biological Bulletin

JF - Biological Bulletin

SN - 0006-3185

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 193297529