Reproduction And Development In Echinodermata And Prochordata

Thảo luận trong 'Học tập' bởi libgeee, 20/5/2024.

  1. libgeee

    libgeee Thành viên kỳ cựu

    Tham gia:
    20/5/2024
    Bài viết:
    6,277
    Đã được thích:
    0
    Điểm thành tích:
    86
    Click Here to Download: https://ouo.io/vUUd2K
    [​IMG]
    Reproduction and Development in Echinodermata and Prochordata
    By: T. J. Pandian
    Publisher:
    CRC Press
    Print ISBN: 9780815364726, 0815364725
    eText ISBN: 9781351106917, 1351106910
    Edition: 1st
    Copyright year: 2018
    Format: EPUB
    Available from $ 23.18 USD
    SKU 9781351106917R90
    Echinoderms and prochordates occupy a key position in vertebrate evolution. The genomes of sea urchin share 70% homology with humans. Researches on cell cycle in sea urchin and phagocytosis in asteroids have fetched Nobel Prizes. In this context, this book assumes immense importance. Echinoderms are unique, as their symmetry is bilateral in larvae but pentamerous radial in adults. The latter has eliminated the development of an anterior head and bilateral appendages. Further, the obligate need to face the substratum for locomotion and acquisition of food has eliminated their planktonic and nektonic existence. Egg size, a decisive factor in recruitment, increases with decreasing depths up to 2,000-5,000 m in lecithotrophic asteroids and ophiuroids but remains constant in their planktotrophics. Smaller (< 18 mm) ophiuroids do not produce a lecithotrophic eggs but larger (> 110 mm) asteroids generate planktotrophic eggs only. Publications on sex ratio of echinoderms indicate the genetic determination of sex at fertilization but those on hybridization, karyotype and ploidy induction do not provide evidence for heterogametism. But the herbivorous echinoids and larvacea with their gonads harboring both germ cells and Nutritive Phagocytes (NPs) have economized the transportation and hormonal costs on gonadal function. Despite the amazing potential just 2 and 3% of echinoderms undergo clonal reproduction and regeneration, respectively. Fission is triggered, when adequate reserve nutrients are accumulated. It is the most prevalent mode of clonal reproduction in holothuroids, asteroids and ophiuroids. However, budding is a more prevalent mode of clonal reproduction in colonial hemichordates and urochordates. In echinoderms, fission and budding eliminate each other. Similarly, autoregulation of early development eliminates clonal reproduction in echinoids and solitary urochordates. In pterobranchs, thaliaceans and ascidians, the repeated and rapid budding leads to colonial formation. Coloniality imposes reductions in species number and body size, generation time and life span, gonad number and fecundity as well as switching from gonochorism to simultaneous hermaphorditism and oviparity to ovoviviparity/viviparity.
     

    Xem thêm các chủ đề tạo bởi libgeee
    Đang tải...


Chia sẻ trang này