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The effects of Acanthaster planci predation on populations of two species of massive coral
Authors:Cameron  Ann M.  Endean  R.  DeVantier  L. M.
Affiliation:(1) Department of Zoology, University of Queensland, 4072 St Lucia, Brisbane, Australia
Abstract:Species of the freshwater planarian genus Polycelis have a variable number of eyes in the head, typically more than a hundred. To elucidate the mechanisms determining the number of eyes, we investigated the relation between eye number and body length in Polycelis sapporo (Ijima & Kaburaki), a non-fissioning species, and P. auriculata Ijima & Kaburaki, a fissioning species. In P. sapporo reared at 7–8 °C, a positive correlation existed between number of eyes and body length. Eye number decreased with starvation. A similar correlation was true of P. auriculata. In specimens of P. auriculata undergoing regeneration, the rate of eye formation was higher in newly formed heads originating from larger tail-pieces than in those from smaller pieces. As a head regenerated from a tail piece or as the body size increased with feeding, the number of eyes increased. These results suggest that the number of eyes in an individual of Polycelis is determined by body length. The fine structure of the photoreceptor and pigment cells in the eyes of P. auriculata is similar to that of comparable cells in the pair of eyes in Dugesia despite the difference in the number of cells comprising an eye.
Keywords:Acanthaster planci  massive coral populations  Great Barrier Reef
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