Cytological Basis of Photoresponsive Behavior in a Sponge Larva
Open Access
- 1 December 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in The Biological Bulletin
- Vol. 201 (3) , 323-338
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1543611
Abstract
Ontogenetic changes in the photoresponse of larvae from the demosponge Reneira sp. were studied by analyzing the swimming paths of individual larvae exposed to diffuse white light. Larvae swam upward upon release from the adult, but were negatively phototactic until at least 12 hours after release. The larval photoreceptors are presumed to be a posterior ring of columnar monociliated epithelial cells that possess 120-μm-long cilia and pigment-filled protrusions. A sudden increase in light intensity caused these cilia to become rigidly straight. If the light intensity remained high, the cilia gradually bent over the pigmented vesicles in the adjacent cytoplasm, and thus covered one entire pole of the larva. The response was reversed upon a sudden decrease in light intensity. The ciliated cells were sensitive to changes in light intensity in larvae of all ages. This response is similar to the shadow response in tunicate larvae or the shading of the photoreceptor in Euglena and is postulated to allow the larvae to steer away from brighter light to darker areas, such as under coral rubble—the preferred site of the adult sponge on the reef flat. In the absence of a coordinating system in cellular sponges, the spatial organization and autonomous behavior of the pigmented posterior cells control the rapid responses to light shown by these larvae.Keywords
This publication has 51 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effects of physical factors on larval behavior, settlement and recruitment of four tropical demospongesMarine Ecology Progress Series, 1996
- Transport and Metabolism of Alanine and Palmitic Acid by Field-Collected Larvae of Tedania ignis (Porifera, Demospongiae): Estimated Consequences of Limited Label TranslocationThe Biological Bulletin, 1995
- Cytoskeletal Architecture and Organelle Transport in Giant Syncytia Formed by Fusion of Hexactinellid Sponge TissuesThe Biological Bulletin, 1995
- Structure and swimming behavior of the larva of Haliclona tubifera (Porifera: Demospongiae)Journal of Morphology, 1993
- Metamorphosis of calcareous sponges I. Ultrastructure of free-swimming larvaeInvertebrate Reproduction & Development, 1992
- Structure and swimming behavior of the larva of Halichondria melanadocia (Porifera: Demospongiae)Journal of Morphology, 1990
- THE SHADOW RESPONSE OF A. HYDROMEDUSAN (POLYORCHIS PENICILLATUS): BEHAVIORAL MECHANISMS CONTROLLING DIEL AND ONTOGENIC VERTICAL MIGRATIONThe Biological Bulletin, 1985
- BIOLOGY OF HYDRACTINIID HYDROIDS. 4. ULTRASTRUCTURE OF THE PLANULA OFHYDRACTINIA ECHINATAThe Biological Bulletin, 1985
- Motor Responses to Polarized Light and Gravity Sensing in Euglena gracilis*†The Journal of Protozoology, 1976
- On the genesis of cellular communicationDevelopmental Biology, 1967