The behavioural physiology of the swimming sea anemoneBoloceroides mcmurrichi
- 22 October 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by The Royal Society in Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. B. Biological Sciences
- Vol. 216 (1204) , 315-334
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.1982.0077
Abstract
The Indo-Pacific sea anemone, Boloceroides mcmurrichi, swims by coordinated lashing of tentacles and can cast off tentacles by autotomy. A predator of Boloceroides, the aeolid Berghia major, causes the anemone to detach its pedal disc and swim away after brief contact with the tentacles, a response apparently due to a chemical substance in the aeolid. Berghia generally attacks the anemone by making a lunge into the midst of the tentacles. Any tentacles seized by the aeolid autotomize, so that the anemone is not held by the aeolid when it begins to swim. Thus these two adaptations, swimming and autotomy, while not preventing predation, keep it to levels easily countered by regeneration. In electrophysiological studies on Boloceroides, the pulses assocated with the conduction systems in other anemones (NN, SS1 and SS2) were not detected. The following identifiable pulses were consistently recorded: (i) tentacle burst pulses (TBP) from isolated and intact tentacles correlated with tentacle flexions; (ii) flexion trigger pulses (FTP) recorded from oral disc and intact tentacles correlated with coordinated tentacle flexions; (iii) swimming trigger pulses (STP) recorded from the pedal disc, preceding bouts of swimming in response to the aeolid, B. major, and to mechanical and electrical stimuli; (iv) swimming arrest pulses (SAP) recorded from the pedal disc and appearing towards the end of bouts of swimming and followed almost at once by their cessation; (v) through-conduction pulses (TCP) recorded from the oral disc as a result of electrical stimuli on the column. The contrast between these pulses and those in other sea anemones probably reflects differences in the structure and mode of life of the anemone in question. A high degree of local autonomy of conduction systems is indicated. The pulses so far detected in Boloceroides reflect the behavioural capacities and the special adaptations of this atypical anemone, but pulses associated with overall coordination remain to be discovered.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Swimming in the sea anemone Stomphia coccinea triggered by a slow conduction systemNature, 1976
- Chemoreception and Conduction Systems in Sea AnemonesPublished by Springer Nature ,1976
- Expansion and Contraction of the Oral Disc in the Sea Anemone Tealia FelinaJournal of Experimental Biology, 1972