Sea Spider Development: How the Encysting Anoplodactylus eroticus Matures from a Bouyant Nymph to a Grounded Adult

A. Maxmen

Published 2013 in arXiv: Populations and Evolution

ABSTRACT

In order to understand how animals evolved over time, biologists must learn how their body parts form during their development. The following is a detailed description of how one species of sea spider transforms from a hatchling to an 8-legged adult. Pycnogonids, or sea spiders, comprise a primitive lineage of arthropods. As such, they hold potential to reveal insights into arthropod evolution. Recent phylogenetic analyses have supported their position as either basal chelicerates or as a separate, fifth major lineage of extant arthropods. Disagreements concerning pycnogonid relations to other arthropods is partly a product of too few primary observations of pycnogonid anatomy and development. This investigation of post-embryonic development of the pycnogonid Anoplodactylus eroticus employs multiple techniques of anatomical observation, including Nomarski optics, scanning electron microscopy and fluorescence microscopy, in order to thoroughly document the life cycle. After the second post-embryonic stage, larvae of A. eroticus burrow within a hydroid and undergo morphogenesis. Larvae emerge from the hydroid and simultaneously molt into the juvenile stage. Over the course of post-embryonic development there are eight stages preceding the mature adult. All structures, except for the anteriormost appendages, the chelifores, undergo some degree of transformation. Chelifores are present prior to hatching and remain mobile over the course of development. Some larger issues important to arthropod evolution are addressed, such as the equivalent of a germband and labrum in pycnogonids. Post-embryonic development of A. eroticus provides an example counteracting previous reports of anamorphic development and a four-segmented head in the pycnogonid ground pattern, findings that were extrapolated to fit the ground pattern of Arthropoda.

PUBLICATION RECORD

CITATION MAP

EXTRACTION MAP

CLAIMS

  • No claims are published for this paper.

CONCEPTS

  • No concepts are published for this paper.

REFERENCES

Showing 1-61 of 61 references · Page 1 of 1

CITED BY