Among echinoderms, nonfeeding larvae usually are simplified in body shape, have uniform ciliation, and have lost the larval gut. A few species have nonfeeding larvae that express some remnant features of feeding larvae like ciliated bands and larval skeleton or larval arms, but typically their larval mouth never opens and their gut does not function. Still other species have retained the feeding larval form, a functional gut, and can feed, but they do not require food to metamorphose. The present note describes the development of a tropical holothurian, Holothuria mexicana, which hatches as a gastrula that is already generating coelomic structures. A translucent auricularia forms with a mouth that opens but becomes reduced soon thereafter. In form and ciliation this auricularia resembles a feeding larva, but it does not respond to food. A doliolaria forms on day 4 and the pentactula on day 6 post-fertilization. Further study of this larva and that of its closely related congener, Holothuria floridana, is warranted.
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31 December 2024
The nonfeeding auricularia of Holothuria mexicana (Echinodermata, Holothuroidea)
Richard B. Emlet
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Invertebrate Biology
Vol. 135 • No. 3
September 2016
Vol. 135 • No. 3
September 2016
Caribbean
development
doliolaria
larva
pentactula