Reexamination of hemocytes in brine shrimp (Crustacea, Branchiopoda)
β Scribed by Gary G. Martin; Han-Ming Joseph Lin; Chau Luc
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 504 KB
- Volume
- 242
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0362-2525
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
In 1941, a single type of hemocyte was described in the blood of the brine shrimp Artemia salina using light microscopy. This condition is unusual because most crustaceans examined using morphological, cytochemical, and functional methods have at least two types of hemoctyes. Upon examining A. franciscana, we found a single type of disk-shaped hemocyte, with a centrally located nucleus and about 15 large (6 Β΅m diameter) granules. The granules stain for the presence of acid phosphatase and react with L-DOPA suggesting, respectively, that they are involved in degrading ingested material and possess the phenoloxidase system. Hemocytes require calcium for adhesion, bind together to mend small wounds in the body wall, and are able to phagocytose bacteria. Blood cells of A. franciscana are morphologically and functionally similar to those of the primitive chelicerate, Limulus polyphemus, and both forms have apparently given rise to more advanced taxa with multiple types of hemocytes. The major difference between the two species is the presence of the phenoloxidase system in the Crustacea and its apparent absence in the chelicerates.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract The cyst of __Artemia__ has shell and membranous coverings over the embryo. The membranous coverings have special adaptive features to allow the physical changes accompanying repeated hydration and dehydration cycles that might occur and adversely influence postembryonic development. Wh
## Abstract The clam shrimp family Lynceidae is unusual in possessing paired fields of short setae on either side of the rostral carina. We describe the position of these fields relative to the direction of water movement in live animals as well as the external and internal structure of these setae
## Abstract In newly hatched brine shrimp (__Artemia franciscana__) cardiac organogenesis and function could only take place with the onset of segmentation. Consequently differences in age, body size and temperature (in the range 22β34Β°C) affected the ontogeny of cardiac activity only indirectly, t