What does Pycnopodia look like before it starts growing into an "adult"??? Find out below at the bottom in Green!!
My colleague Dr. Allison Gong at the UC Santa Cruz Long Marine Laboratory recently had the fortune to observe the spawning and early larval development of Pycnopodia helianthoides-the sunflower star one of my favorite animals!
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Info and the comments below are graciously provided by her (seen above in her natural habitat)!
Apparently the gametes collected were produced by these hefty beasts on display at the Seymour Center. There are four in the aquarium. Each one may be either the mother or the father of these larvae.
Allison says: "This is a 3-day-old early dipleurula larva. It is basically a ciliated blob with an invagination in the flattened posterior end. The internal tube and knob structures are the developing larval gut."
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Allison says: "This photo is essentially the same thing, photographed under dark-field conditions for a rather cool effect."
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UPDATE Ladies and Gentlemen, we have BIPINNARIA!!! (an intermediate larval stage of starfish)
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Sez Allison: We had a near miss late last week and lost about half of the larvae. I think maybe they didn't like the food we were giving them. We've altered the diet and the remaining larvae seem happy, although some of them may be arrested at an early stage of development.
This individual was the most advanced of all the larvae I observed today. At 29 days it is starting to develop little nubbins that may grow into long brachiolar arms--at least, I hope they do!--and measures 850 microns in length.
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The simple band in the earlier stages has been elaborated into pointy little nubbins called brachiolar arms. In other species, such as Pisaster ochraceus, the arms get really long; I don't know how long they'll get in these Pycnopodia larvae. We'll have to wait and see.
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From Allison: Ta-dah! One larva has begun the process of metamorphosis. It has attached itself to a small piece of mussel shell with some suckers on the anterior end. The round structure you see at the top of the animal is the juvenile rudiment, or the earliest stage of the juvenile body, containing the water vascular system's first 5 tube feet. You can see that the brachiolar arms are still there. At this point the critter can no longer feed, as it completely re-arranges its entire body, and survives on energy reserves it put away as a feeding larva.
I never get tired of watching this kind of metamorphosis, in stars or urchins. It's the coolest thing out there. In a matter of a few days the animal transforms from a bilateral swimming creature to a pentaradial crawling beast, with a full scale re-arrangement of its external and internal anatomy. Larval parts will be resorbed or discarded, and new juvenile structures will be formed.
Amazing, isn't it?
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I think these new juveniles will fast for a number of weeks, living on energy reserves they packed away while they were feeding larvae. It remains to be seen whether or not we can figure out what to feed these tiny guys, but we'll try to keep them going and will hopefully be able to document how all of the arms develop. Remember, these stars have ~20 arms as adults, although they start out with the requisite echinoderm 5, and we're interested in seeing if there's a pattern to how all the arms form.
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From here, they grow onto the enormous, multi-rayed forms that we know and love! I suspect that takes AT LEAST several months to years.... so, leave em' alone when you find em as adults! It probably takes a LONG time for them to reach even a 6 inch diameter!
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