The University of North Carolina at Wilmington, Department of Biology and Marine Biology, 601 S. College Rd., Wilmington, NC 28403, USA.
Unit of Research for Practical Application, Korea Polar Research Institute (KOPRI), Yeonsu-gu, Incheon 21990, South Korea; Department of Polar Sciences, University of Science and Technology, Incheon 21990, South Korea.
J Struct Biol. 2021 Mar;213(1):107705. doi: 10.1016/j.jsb.2021.107705. Epub 2021 Feb 9.
The copepod, Boeckella poppei, is broadly distributed in Antarctic and subantarctic maritime lakes threatened by climate change and anthropogenic chemicals. Unfortunately, comparatively little is known about freshwater zooplankton in lakes influenced by the Southern Ocean. In order to predict the impact of climate change and chemicals on freshwater species like B. poppei, it is necessary to understand the nature of their most resilient life stages. Embryos of B. poppei survive up to two centuries in a resilient dormant state, but no published studies evaluate the encapsulating wall that protects theses embryos or their development after dormancy. This study fills that knowledge gap by using microscopy to examine development and the encapsulating wall in B. poppei embryos from Antarctica. The encapsulating wall of B. poppei is comprised of three layers that appear to be conserved among crustacean zooplankton, but emergence and hatching are uniquely delayed until the nauplius is fully formed in this species. Diapause embryos in Antarctic sediments appear to be in a partially syncytial mid-gastrula stage. The number of nuclei quadruples between the end of diapause and hatching. Approximately 75% of yolk platelets are completely consumed during the same time period. However, some yolk platelets are left completely intact at the time of hatching. Preservation of complete yolk platelets suggests an all-or-none biochemical process for activating yolk consumption that is inactivated during dormancy to preserve yolk for post-dormancy development. The implications of these and additional ultrastructural features are discussed in the context of anthropogenic influence and the natural environment.
桡足类 Boeckella poppei 广泛分布于受气候变化和人为化学物质威胁的南极和亚南极海洋湖泊中。不幸的是,人们对受南大洋影响的湖泊中的淡水浮游动物知之甚少。为了预测气候变化和化学物质对像 B. poppei 这样的淡水物种的影响,有必要了解其最具弹性的生命阶段的性质。B. poppei 的胚胎可以在有弹性的休眠状态下存活长达两个世纪,但没有发表的研究评估保护这些胚胎或它们在休眠后发育的包封壁。本研究通过使用显微镜检查南极洲 B. poppei 胚胎的发育和包封壁,填补了这一知识空白。B. poppei 的包封壁由三层组成,似乎在甲壳类浮游动物中是保守的,但在这个物种中,孵化和孵化的出现被独特地延迟到无节幼体完全形成。南极沉积物中的休眠胚胎似乎处于部分合胞中肠胚阶段。在休眠结束和孵化之间,细胞核数量增加了四倍。大约 75%的卵黄小板在同一时期完全消耗。然而,在孵化时,一些卵黄小板仍然完好无损。完整卵黄小板的保存表明,卵黄消耗的生化过程是全有或全无的,在休眠期间失活,以保存卵黄用于休眠后发育。这些和其他超微结构特征的意义在人为影响和自然环境的背景下进行了讨论。