4.5 Article

Development and Phenotypic Plasticity of Tubes and Tubaria of the Living Graptolite Rhabdopleura recondita (Pterobranchia, Hemichordata)

Journal

DIVERSITY-BASEL
Volume 14, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/d14121080

Keywords

adaptation; Adriatic; behaviour; development; larvae; morphology

Funding

  1. CBC NSERC
  2. [RGPIN-2017-05058]

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This study reports on the larval settlement and metamorphosis of Rhabdopleura recondita in the absence or presence of a bryozoan host. The results show that there was no significant variation in the number or length of newly formed tubes after 40 days, suggesting that R. recondita resides in a narrow velocity range and that tube and tubarium development is largely invariable.
The extant graptolite Rhabdopleura recondita has been so far recorded only as inhabiting a bryozoan skeleton. Its larval settlement and metamorphosis are possible in the absence of a bryozoan zoarium, whereas further colony development may require that the larva is hidden inside the bryozoan host. This dependence may constrain the development of R. recondita tube and tubaria compared to the other Rhabdopleura species that develop without a host. We report here on larval settlement and metamorphosis in the absence/presence of a bryozoan host skeleton. We also make the first attempt to test the phenotypical response of R. recondita tubes and tubaria under variable hydrodynamic regimes in laboratory conditions. After 40 days, no significant variation was detected in the number or length of the newly formed tubes. These findings suggest that R. recondita eventually resides in a narrow velocity range and that tube and tubarium development is largely invariable.

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