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Transitions in functional morphology from “large branchiopods” to Cladocera: Video and confocal microscopic studies of Cyclestheria hislopi (Cyclestherida) and Sida crystallina (Cladocera: Ctenopoda)
Authors:Zandra M S Sigvardt  Katrine Worsaae  Sukonthip Savatenalinton  Alexandra Kerbl  Jørgen Olesen
Institution:1. Natural History Museum of Denmark, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark;2. Marine Biological Section, Department of Biology, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark

Contribution: Conceptualization, Formal analysis, Funding acquisition, Methodology, Resources, Supervision, Writing - review & editing;3. Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Mahasarakham University, Mahasarakham, Thailand;4. Marine Biological Section, Department of Biology, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark

Contribution: Data curation, Formal analysis, Methodology, Writing - review & editing

Abstract:Great diversity is found in morphology and functionality of arthropod appendages, both along the body axis of individual animals and between different life-cycle stages. Despite many branchiopod crustaceans being well known for displaying a relatively simple arrangement of many serially post-maxillary appendages (trunk limbs), this taxon also shows an often unappreciated large variation in appendage morphology. Diplostracan branchiopods exhibit generally a division of labor into locomotory antennae and feeding/filtratory post-maxillary appendages (trunk limbs). We here study the functionality and morphology of the swimming antennae and feeding appendages in clam shrimps and cladocerans and analyze the findings in an evolutionary context (e.g., possible progenetic origin of Cladocera). We focus on Cyclestheria hislopi (Cyclestherida), sister species to Cladocera and exhibiting many “large” branchiopod characters (e.g., many serially similar appendages), and Sida crystallina (Cladocera, Ctenopoda), which likely exhibits plesiomorphic cladoceran traits (e.g., six pairs of serially similar appendages). We combine (semi-)high-speed recordings of behavior with confocal laser scanning microscopy analyses of musculature to infer functionality and homologies of locomotory and filtratory appendages in the two groups. Our morphological study shows that the musculature in all trunk limbs (irrespective of limb size) of both C. hislopi and S. crystallina comprises overall similar muscle groups in largely corresponding arrangements. Some differences between C. hislopi and S. crystallina, such as fewer trunk limbs and antennal segments in the latter, may reflect a progenetic origin of Cladocera. Other differences seem related to the appearance of a specialized type of swimming and feeding in Cladocera, where the anterior locomotory system (antennae) and the posterior feeding system (trunk limbs) have become fully separated functionally from each other. This separation is likely one explanation for the omnipresence of cladocerans, which have conquered both freshwater and marine free water masses and a number of other habitats.
Keywords:F-actin-labeling  high-speed video  musculature  phalloidin staining  swimming antennae  trunk limbs
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