How to translate text using browser tools
1 December 2008 Algal Symbionts in the Larval Tunic Lamellae of the Colonial Ascidian Lissoclinum timorense (Ascidiacea, Didemnidae)
Euichi Hirose, Shunsuke Nakabayashi
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Lissoclinum timorense is a colonial ascidian that harbors the prokaryotic alga Prochloron. The algal photosymbionts adhere to the lamellae of the tunic on the posterior half of the trunk of larvae, which aggregate in the common cloacal cavity of the mother colony. Bead-adhesion tests demonstrated that the lamellae are adhesive, whereas the anterior half of the larval trunk is not. The anterior half is covered with a thin layer of outer tunic, which probably prevents Prochloron cells from attaching and interfering with sensory receptors and adhesive organs. The larval structures and the mode of algal transmission between generations are very similar to those of the Prochloron-harboring ascidian Didemnum molle. Molecular phylogenetic analyses have suggested that photosymbiosis was independently established in each genus, and thus the apparent similarity in the larvae probably resulted from convergence. The distribution pattern of photosymbionts is probably more determinative of algal transmission than phylogenetic constraints.

Euichi Hirose and Shunsuke Nakabayashi "Algal Symbionts in the Larval Tunic Lamellae of the Colonial Ascidian Lissoclinum timorense (Ascidiacea, Didemnidae)," Zoological Science 25(12), 1205-1211, (1 December 2008). https://doi.org/10.2108/zsj.25.1205
Received: 16 June 2008; Accepted: 1 August 2008; Published: 1 December 2008
KEYWORDS
Coral reef
photosymbiosis
Prochloron
ultrastructure
vertical transmission
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission
Back to Top