Environmental and endogenous control of sexuality in a rotifer life cycle: developmental and population biology

被引:66
|
作者
Gilbert, JJ [1 ]
机构
[1] Dartmouth Coll, Dept Biol Sci, Hanover, NH 03755 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1046/j.1525-142X.2003.03004.x
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Induction of mictic females, and hence initiation of sexuality, in the life cycle of some Brachionus requires an environmental stimulus associated with crowding. The inducing stimulus appears to be a taxonomically specific chemical released into the environment by the rotifers. Oocytes are induced to develop into mictic females before they are oviposited by their amictic mothers and begin cleavage divisions. Thus, the inducer affects the oocyte in the maternal body cavity either directly or indirectly by altering the physiology of its mother. The level of sexual reproduction expressed in populations of a Florida strain of B. calyciflorus is controlled by two types of endogenous factors and by the degree of crowding. First, some fraction of genetically identical oocytes in a clonal population fails to respond to even extreme crowding conditions, thus ensuring some potential for continued population growth by female parthenogenesis. Second, the propensity of amictic females to produce mictic daughters is extremely low when they hatch from fertilized resting eggs and then gradually increases to an asymptote after about 12 parthenogenetic generations. This multigenerational parental effect likely is due to a cytoplasmic factor in fertilized eggs that inhibits expression of the mictic-female phenotype and that is gradually diluted in successive parthenogenetic generations. The effect may increase a clone's genetic contribution to the resting-egg bank by increasing its population size through parthenogenetic generations before mictic females are induced.
引用
收藏
页码:19 / 24
页数:6
相关论文
共 48 条
  • [1] Two types of phenotypic plasticity control a rotifer life cycle.
    Gilbert, JJ
    AMERICAN ZOOLOGIST, 2001, 41 (06): : 1454 - 1454
  • [2] Sorus developmental biology of hybrid cultivar in Saccharina japonica: Environmental and endogenous regulation
    Liu, Yi
    Liang, Zhourui
    Zhang, Pengyan
    Yuan, Yanmin
    Wu, Yukun
    Zhang, Di
    Duan, Maohong
    Liu, Fuli
    AQUACULTURE, 2023, 565
  • [3] Helmintic life cycle and population control
    Martinez, MN
    Katzper, M
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 1998 MEDICAL SCIENCES SIMULATION CONFERENCE, 1998, : 128 - 133
  • [4] Control of the Plant Cell Cycle by Developmental and Environmental Cues
    Komaki, Shinichiro
    Sugimoto, Keiko
    PLANT AND CELL PHYSIOLOGY, 2012, 53 (06) : 953 - 964
  • [5] DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY OF PNEUMOCYSTIS-CARINII, AN ALTERNATIVE VIEW ON LIFE-CYCLE OF PARASITE
    VOSSEN, MEMH
    BECKERS, PJA
    MEUWISSEN, JHET
    STADHOUDERS, AM
    ZEITSCHRIFT FUR PARASITENKUNDE-PARASITOLOGY RESEARCH, 1978, 55 (02): : 101 - 118
  • [6] ENDOGENOUS GROWTH IN A LIFE-CYCLE MODEL - THE ROLE OF POPULATION-GROWTH AND TAXATION
    ARRAU, P
    JOURNAL OF POLICY MODELING, 1992, 14 (02) : 167 - 186
  • [7] Variations in the life-cycle parameters and population growth of rotifer Brachionus plicatilis under the stress of microplastics and 17β-estradiol
    Mao, Tianyue
    Lu, Yurong
    Ma, Huijuan
    Pan, Zihan
    Zhang, Rui
    Zhu, Tian
    Yang, Yunhong
    Han, Cui
    Yang, Jiaxin
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2022, 835
  • [8] Reduction of environmental impacts and material control on the life cycle oriented approach
    Eto, Chisumi
    Shinku/Journal of the Vacuum Society of Japan, 2005, 48 (06) : 359 - 364
  • [9] BIOLOGY AND LIFE-CYCLE OF A NEW-ZEALAND POPULATION OF HETERORHABDITIS-HELIOTHIDIS (HETERORHABDITIDAE)
    WOUTS, WM
    NEMATOLOGICA, 1979, 25 (02): : 191 - 202
  • [10] Research On Environmental Cost Control Research-Based on the Product Life Cycle
    Huang Jing
    CONTEMPORARY INNOVATION AND DEVELOPMENT IN MANAGEMENT SCIENCE, 2012, : 520 - 524