1. Ultrastructure of the integument of a pelagic Crustacean: moult cycle related studies on the Antarctic krill, Euphausia superba.
- Author
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Buchholz, C. and Buchholz, F.
- Subjects
ULTRASTRUCTURE (Biology) ,CRUSTACEA ,MOLTING ,EUPHAUSIA superba ,KRILL - Abstract
The ultrastructure of euphausiid integument was examined in relation to the moult cycle and supplemented by investigations of chitinase activity in the integument and content of N-acetyl-β-D-glucosamine in the hemolymph. The Antarctic krill, Euphausia superba was collected in 1983 in Admiralty Bay, King George Island, Antarctica. Some specimens of the Northern krill, Meganyctiphanes norvegica, from the Danish Kattegat served for comparison. As a major aim of the study, the moult staging system developed for living tissue could be verified by ultrastructural findings. Under experimental high production conditions of the Antarctic summer, no period of rest or 'intermoult' between post- and premoult was observed in subadult E. superba. Neither was a resting phase seen at the cellular level, the epidermis remained active. The epidermal gland cells did not show any cyclical changes, and the organelles of protein synthesis were generally well developed in all moult stages. In order to follow the physiological course of events, structural and biochemical methods were combined and showed as a result that the last moult stage before ecdysis is characterized by massive cuticular resorption. The epicuticle remained ultrastructurally unchanged before and after ecdysis, even though its permeability should alter at ecdysis. The existence of muscle insertions which connect the old and the new cuticle across the exuvial space suggests an answer to the question why E. superba is hardly impaired in swimming almost up to the time of ecdysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1989
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