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Effects of variable water motion on regeneration of Hemipholis elongata (Echinodermata, Ophiuroidea)
Authors:Justin S McAlister  Stephen E Stancyk
Institution:Department of Biology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA;Department of Biological Sciences &Marine Science Program, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC 29208, USA
Abstract:Abstract. To determine whether increased water motion affects patterns of regeneration in the subtidal burrowing brittlestar Hemipholis elongata (phylum Echinodermata), individuals were subjected to laboratory-controlled turbulence conditions. Half of each replicate aquarium experienced oscillatory (wave-like) turbulence while the other half had no turbulence. Individual brittlestars from which arm-tips had been removed were allowed to burrow and to regenerate. Regenerated arm-tip length and weight were tested for differences between organisms in calm and turbulent conditions. Regenerated arm-tip length differed significantly between control and treatment, but arm-tip dry weight and skeleton/tissue ratio of regenerated arm-tips did not. To quantify plasticity in the skeleton, 15 morphological measurements made on the proximal face of vertebral ossicles (using scanning electron microscopy) were integrated as an index of overall ossicle size. We found a significant difference in the overall size index of the vertebral ossicles between treatments, but could not determine which of the measurements contributed most to the difference. The results indicate that regeneration in H. elongata is a complex process that can be modified by environmental conditions.
Keywords:phenotypic plasticity  brittlestar
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