Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-ndmmz Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-17T09:36:36.529Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Some Aspects of Ionic and Osmotic Regulation in Tisbe [Copepoda, Harpacticoida] in Relation to Polymorphism and Geographical Distribution

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 May 2009

B. Battaglia
Affiliation:
Istituto di Zoologia e Anatomia comparata, Università di Padova
G. W. Bryan
Affiliation:
The Plymouth Laboratory

Extract

Ability to tolerate low salinities has been compared in homozygous adult females of the trifasciata and violacea forms of the polymorphic copepod Tisbe reticulata from Chioggia (lagoon of Venice). Both forms appear to be equally capable of tolerating sea-water concentrations of between 100 and 33 %. Further comparison with the trifasciata form of T. reticulata from Plymouth and with three different geographical populations of Tisbe furcata has shown that these copepods are rather less tolerant.

A study of ionic regulation using the isotopes 22Na, 42K and 137Cs has shown that in diluted sea water T. reticulata does not control the body Na concentration but does control the K concentration. Exchange rates for 42K and 137Cs are higher in the violacea than in the trifasciata forms of T. reticulata from Chioggia and the difference may have an adaptive nature although its significance is not clear. With regard to 42K, the difference between the two polymorphic forms from the same population of T. reticulata is greater than that between the three different geographical populations of T. furcata. This serves to add more emphasis to the fact that colour polymorphism in T. reticulata can be associated with other processes.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 1964

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Battaglia, B., 1957. Ecological differentiation and incipient intraspecific isolation in marine copepods. Ann. Biol., Vol. 33, pp. 259–68.Google Scholar
Battaglia, B., 1958. Balanced polymorphism in Tisbe reticulata, a marine copepod. Evolution, Vol. 12, pp. 358–64.Google Scholar
Battaglia, B., 1959. II polimorfismo adattativo e i fattori della selezione nel copepode Tisbe reticulata Bocquet. Arch. Oceanogr. Limnol., Venezia, Vol. 11, pp. 305–55.Google Scholar
Battaglia, B., 1961. Rapporti tra geni per la pigmentazione e la sessualità in Tisbe reticulata. Atti A.G.I., Vol. 6, pp. 439–47.Google Scholar
Battaglia, B., 1962. Controllo genetico della velocità di sviluppo in popolazioni geografiche del copepode marino Tisbe furcata (Baird). Atti lst. Veneto, Vol. 120, pp. 8391.Google Scholar
Bocquet, C., 1951. Recherches sur Tisbe (Idyea) reticulata, n.sp. Essai d'analyse génétique, etc. Arch. Zool. exp. gén. T. 87, pp. 335416.Google Scholar
Bryan, G. W., 1960. Sodium regulation in the crayfish Astacus fluviatilis. I. The normal animal. J. exp. BioL., Vol. 37, pp. 8399.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bryan, G. W., 1963. The accumulation of radioactive caesium by marine invertebrates. J. mar. biol. Ass. U.K., Vol. 43, pp. 519–39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Croghan, P. C., 1958. Ionic Fluxes In Anemia Salina (L.). J. exp. BioL, Vol. 35, pp. 425–36.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Young, M. K. & Raisz, L. G., 1952. An anthrone procedure for determination of inulin in biological fluids. Proc. Soc. exp. Biol, N.Y., Vol. 80, pp. 771–4.Google Scholar