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Swimming in the nudibranch Melibe leonina consists of five types of movements that occur in the following sequence: (1) withdrawal, (2) lateral flattening, (3) a series of lateral flexions, (4) unrolling and swinging, and (5) termination. Melibe swims spontaneously, as well as in response to different types of aversive stimuli. In this study, swimming was elicited by contact with the tube feet of the predatory sea star Pycnopodia helianthoides, pinching with forceps, or application of a 1 M KCl solution. During an episode of swimming, the duration of swim cycles (2.7 +/- 0.2 s [mean +/- SEM], n = 29) and the amplitude of lateral flexions remained relatively constant. However, the latency between the application of a stimulus and initiation of swimming was more variable, as was the duration of an episode of swimming. For example, when touched with a single tube foot from a sea star (n = 32), the latency to swim was 7.0 +/- 2.4 s, and swimming continued for 53.7 +/- 9.4 s, whereas application of KCl resulted in a longer latency to swim (22.3 +/- 4.5 s) and more prolonged swimming episodes (174.9 +/- 32.1 s). Swimming individuals tended to move in a direction perpendicular to the long axis of the foot, which propelled them laterally when they were oriented with the oral hood toward the surface of the water. The results of this study indicate that swimming in Melibe, like that in several other molluscs, is a stereotyped fixed action pattern that can be reliably elicited in the laboratory. These characteristics, along with the large identifiable neurons typical of many molluscs, make swimming in this nudibranch amenable to neuroethological analyses. 相似文献
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Colin A. Lee Winsor H. Watson III 《Marine and Freshwater Behaviour and Physiology》2016,49(4):277-290
Although research on satiation has revealed much about the effect of sensory inputs on motivational state, we have yet to fully understand exactly how satiating signals influence the neural circuits underlying specific behaviors. One organism that is well suited for addressing this question is the nudibranch Melibe leonina, because its feeding activity is easily quantified, it has translucent skin that makes the stomach easy to observe, and it has large, identifiable neurons that are very suitable for subsequent analysis of the neural correlates of satiation. In this study our goal was to document the time course of satiation in Melibe, and determine if stomach distention contributes to satiation. When exposed to brine shrimp (Artemia), Melibe immediately commenced stereotypic oral hood movements to capture prey, and continued to do so for approximately five hours. Individuals eventually stopped, despite the continued presence of food, and the slowing and eventual termination of oral hood closures was correlated with distension of the stomach caused by the ingested Artemia. We obtained further evidence that stomach distension is one of the underlying causes of satiation by injecting artificial non-nutritive food into the stomach, and by cutting open part of the stomach wall to prevent it from filling and distending. The first treatment caused satiation to occur more rapidly, while the second treatment delayed satiation. Both results demonstrate that in Melibe stomach distention has a major impact on the motivation to feed. These findings provide the framework for subsequent studies designed to determine precisely how stomach distention influences feeding circuits. 相似文献
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Watson Winsor H. III ; Lawrence Kaddee A.; Newcomb James M. 《Integrative and comparative biology》2001,41(4):1026-1035
The nudibranch Melibe leonina swims by rhythmically flexingits body from side to side at a frequency of 1 cycle every 25sec. Melibe swim spontaneously, when they are dislodged fromthe substrate, or when they come in contact with predatory seastars,such as Pycnopodia helianthoides. Intracellular recordings obtainedfrom semi-intact swimming Melibe reveal a population of 15 swimmotoneurons (SMNs) in each pedal ganglion. In general, SMNsin one pedal ganglion fire out-of-phase with SMNs in the oppositepedal ganglion, resulting in rhythmic side-to-side bending movements.In isolated brains, recordings from SMNs yield similar results,indicating the existence of a swim central pattern generator(CPG). There is no evidence for synaptic interactions betweenSMNs and either inhibiting or exciting SMNs has no impact onthe swim pattern. The SMNs are driven by a CPG consisting of4 interneurons; 2 in the cerebropleural ganglia and 1 in eachpedal ganglion. Appropriate bursting activity in the swim interneuronsis necessary for swimming to occur. Either hyperpolarizationor depolarization of any of the 4 CPG interneurons disruptsthe normal swim pattern. Swimming behavior, and the fictiveswim motor program expressed by the isolated brain, are inhibitedby light and nitric oxide donors. NADPH-diaphorase stainingand nitric oxide synthase (NOS) immunocytochemistry of Melibebrains suggests the source of nitric oxide might be a pair ofbilaterally symmetrical cells located in the cerebropleuralganglia. 相似文献
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The nudibranch Melibe leonina swims by rhythmically bending from side to side at a frequency of 1 cycle every 2-4 s. The objective of this study was to locate putative swim motoneurons (pSMNs) that drive these lateral flexions and determine if swimming in this species is produced by a swim central pattern generator (sCPG). In the first set of experiments, intracellular recordings were obtained from pSMNs in semi-intact, swimming animals. About 10-14 pSMNs were identified on the dorsal surface of each pedal ganglion and 4-7 on the ventral side. In general, the pSMNs in a given pedal ganglion fired synchronously and caused the animal to flex in that direction, whereas the pSMNs in the opposite pedal ganglion fired in anti-phase. When swimming stopped, so did rhythmic pSMN bursting; when swimming commenced, pSMNs resumed bursting. In the second series of experiments, intracellular recordings were obtained from pSMNs in isolated brains that spontaneously expressed the swim motor program. The pattern of activity recorded from pSMNs in isolated brains was very similar to the bursting pattern obtained from the same pSMNs in semi-intact animals, indicating that the sCPG can produce the swim rhythm in the absence of sensory feedback. Exposing the brain to light or cutting the pedal-pedal connectives inhibited fictive swimming in the isolated brain. The pSMNs do not appear to participate in the sCPG. Rather, they received rhythmic excitatory and inhibitory synaptic input from interneurons that probably comprise the sCPG circuit. 相似文献
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A. O. Dennis Willows 《Developmental neurobiology》1985,16(3):157-170
The tropical aeoliacean nudibranch Phestilla sibogae, has a number of large and reidentifiable neurons in its centrally located cerebral-pedal-pleural ganglion complex. In studies involving nearly intact animal preparations, neurons were identified which control specific movements of the dorsal cerata, the oral veil tentacles, and the margins of the foot. Responses of neurons to mechanical vibrations in the environment, and responses to light not mediated by the eyes are described. Finally, a pair of large cerebral neurons are identified that are superficially similar in structure, location, and function to the metacerebral giants found in several other opisthobranchs. These neurons are electrically coupled and control stereotyped movements of the mouth. These anatomical and neurophysiological features, when coupled with the fact that the generation time of Phestilla (30 days) is comparable to that of Drosophila suggests that this nudibranch may prove useful in combined studies of neurophysiology, behavior and genetics. 相似文献
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A.O. Dennis Willows 《Marine and Freshwater Behaviour and Physiology》2013,45(2-3):181-192
The marine nudibranch mollusc Tritonia diotnedea orients to the geomagnetic field in the laboratory, and has identifiable brain cells (Pd5, 6) which respond electrically when the ambient magnetic field is rotated artificially. Field studies reported here seek to determine if and why Tritonia diomedea uses geomagnetic cues to orient in the field. Animals were collected in their natural habitat using SCUBA, and placed on lines with magnetic headings parallel to the shore, at different locations with respect to their site of origin. Observations made at two or more tidal cycles later indicate that most animals move from the line in a direction corresponding to the original shoreward direction, regardless of the actual shoreward direction at the site of release, suggesting guidance by geomagnetic cues. Tritonia diomedea are close to neutrally buoyant, and subject to transport over great distances when dislodged by tidal currents or during escape swimming behavior. Since the natural distribution of food and mates is along the shoreline, shoreward orientation using geomagnetic cues, particularly when other cues are weak or ambiguous, may have adaptive value. 相似文献
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Polyp mimicry in a new species of aeolid nudibranch mollusc 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
W. B. Rudman 《Journal of Zoology》1981,193(3):421-427
A new species of aeolid mollusc of the genus Cuthona (Tergipedidae) is described from New South Wales, Australia. It feeds on the tubulariid hydroid Zyzzyzus spongicola , and its cerata have developed two circlets of epithelial tentacles making the cerata remarkable mimics of the hydroid polyp on which they feed. 相似文献
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James M. Newcomb Kaddee A. Lawrence Winsor H. Watson 《Marine and Freshwater Behaviour and Physiology》2004,37(4):253-269
In this study, we investigated the effects of light on both the locomotion of intact animals and the swim motor program expressed by isolated brains in the gastropod Melibe leonina. Spontaneous locomotion (crawling and swimming) was examined during a period of natural lighting (L:D) to establish normal behavior, and then under two different light regimes: constant darkness (D:D) and constant light (L:L). In L:D, there was significantly more locomotor activity at night than during the day and this pattern continued in D:D. However, in L:L, activity was substantially reduced at all times. Using isolated brain preparations, we further demonstrated that the swim motor program was rapidly inhibited by light, and that this inhibition was mediated by the eyes. These results indicate that M. leonina displays a nocturnal activity pattern, and that light has a strong inhibitory effect on locomotion in the intact animal and on the swim motor program expressed by the isolated brain. 相似文献
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James M. Newcomb Kaddee A. Lawrence † Winsor H. Watson III 《Marine and Freshwater Behaviour and Physiology》2013,45(4):253-269
In this study, we investigated the effects of light on both the locomotion of intact animals and the swim motor program expressed by isolated brains in the gastropod Melibe leonina. Spontaneous locomotion (crawling and swimming) was examined during a period of natural lighting (L:D) to establish normal behavior, and then under two different light regimes: constant darkness (D:D) and constant light (L:L). In L:D, there was significantly more locomotor activity at night than during the day and this pattern continued in D:D. However, in L:L, activity was substantially reduced at all times. Using isolated brain preparations, we further demonstrated that the swim motor program was rapidly inhibited by light, and that this inhibition was mediated by the eyes. These results indicate that M. leonina displays a nocturnal activity pattern, and that light has a strong inhibitory effect on locomotion in the intact animal and on the swim motor program expressed by the isolated brain. 相似文献
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Both serotonin and the molluskan pedal neuropeptides (TPEPs) cause increased ciliary beating rate of cells of the foot epithelium of the nudibranch mollusk, Tritonia diomedea. Here we compared responses of the ciliated epithelium of the esophagus with that of the foot, and report fundamental differences. Serotonin reduces the ciliary transport rate of the esophagus. We find also that the serotonin driven inhibition of esophagus is blocked and the excitation of foot epithelium is reduced by the serotonin receptor blocker ketanserin. On the contrary, ergometrine completely blocked the serotonin effect in the esophagus, and does not block the serotonin effect in the foot. Neither the TPEP driven excitation of ciliated cells of the foot nor that of the esophagus is blocked by ketanserin and ergometrine. Clearly, serotonin and TPEP regulation of different ciliated epithelia involve different receptors. Thus, mechanisms of serotonin control of different ciliated epithelia in the same animal are apparently fundamentally different, and unlike responses in all previous reports, 5HT here inhibits a ciliated epihelium. 相似文献
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The sperm axoneme of Hypselodoris tricolor forms from a single centriole that is located initially beneath the plasma membrane and then migrates to the nuclear surface. A conspicuous centriolar adjunct-like formation is present in the neck of midspermatids, but it becomes very reduced at the end of spermiogenesis. In spermatocyte and spermatid mitochondria, intracristal bodies originate from the accumulation of a dense material in some cristae. From our observations and foregoing reports, it may be concluded that the process of sperm tail differentiation in opisthobranchs resembles that in pulmonates, whereas it differs in many respects from that occurring in prosobranchs. The appearance of intracristal bodies in modified mitochondria seems to be a special feature of spermatogenesis in the opisthobranchs that does not occur in the two other groups of gastropod molluscs. 相似文献
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Joseph L. Sevigny Lauren E. Kirouac William Kelley Thomas Jordan S. Ramsdell Kayla E. Lawlor Osman Sharifi Simarvir Grewal Christopher Baysdorfer Kenneth Curr Amanda A. Naimie Kazufusa Okamoto James A. Murray James M. Newcomb 《PloS one》2015,10(5)
The phylogenetic relationships among certain groups of gastropods have remained unresolved in recent studies, especially in the diverse subclass Opisthobranchia, where nudibranchs have been poorly represented. Here we present the complete mitochondrial genomes of Melibe leonina and Tritonia diomedea (more recently named T. tetraquetra), two nudibranchs from the unrepresented Cladobranchia group, and report on the resulting phylogenetic analyses. Both genomes coded for the typical thirteen protein-coding genes, twenty-two transfer RNAs, and two ribosomal RNAs seen in other species. The twelve-nucleotide deletion previously reported for the cytochrome oxidase 1 gene in several other Melibe species was further clarified as three separate deletion events. These deletions were not present in any opisthobranchs examined in our study, including the newly sequenced M. leonina or T. diomedea, suggesting that these previously reported deletions may represent more recently divergent taxa. Analysis of the secondary structures for all twenty-two tRNAs of both M. leonina and T. diomedea indicated truncated d arms for the two serine tRNAs, as seen in some other heterobranchs. In addition, the serine 1 tRNA in T. diomedea contained an anticodon not yet reported in any other gastropod. For phylogenetic analysis, we used the thirteen protein-coding genes from the mitochondrial genomes of M. leonina, T. diomedea, and seventy-one other gastropods. Phylogenetic analyses were performed for both the class Gastropoda and the subclass Opisthobranchia. Both Bayesian and maximum likelihood analyses resulted in similar tree topologies. In the Opisthobranchia, the five orders represented in our study were monophyletic (Anaspidea, Cephalaspidea, Notaspidea, Nudibranchia, Sacoglossa). In Gastropoda, two of the three traditional subclasses, Opisthobranchia and Pulmonata, were not monophyletic. In contrast, four of the more recently named gastropod clades (Vetigastropoda, Neritimorpha, Caenogastropoda, and Heterobranchia) were all monophyletic, and thus appear to be better classifications for this diverse group. 相似文献
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External diversity is restrained by internal conservatism: New nudibranch mollusc contributes to the cryptic species problem 下载免费PDF全文
Tatiana Korshunova Alexander Martynov Torkild Bakken Bernard Picton 《Zoologica scripta》2017,46(6):683-692
Cryptic species are an important concept of modern biodiversity studies and a potential basis for immensely increasing the amount of biological diversity worldwide; however, the conceptual grounds of cryptic species still need to be refined. Here, using a remarkable example from marine invertebrates, the case of a species complex of common large‐sized nudibranchs of the genus Dendronotus in European waters is presented, which is relevant for the ongoing cryptic species discussion. Based on extensive sampling in the seas of Northern Hemisphere from United Kingdom to the Sea of Japan, a morphological and molecular framework is constructed for understanding the diversity of European Dendronotus nudibranchs. The present study discovered notable multilevel character diversity within the common Dendronotus “frondosus” species complex. This implies the highest degree of variation of external characters with parallel colour patterns among different species and significantly constrained conservatism of internal characters. The molecular data are congruent with the stable differences in the internal features and confirm the presence of three distinct species in this complex. While two species were already known, the third species is evidently new, based on morphological and molecular evidence and is described here as Dendronotus europaeus sp. n. In the light of multilevel character diversity, the general problem of plausibility of the distinction and practical usage of the terms “cryptic” and “pseudocryptic” species is discussed. 相似文献