RESUMEN
We report four draft genome sequences related to the genera Bacillus and Escherichia, recovered from surfaces associated with human interaction, and Sediminibacterium, recovered from an aquatic environment. This study was part of an undergraduate microbial bioinformatics course at the State University of New York at Geneseo.
RESUMEN
Two juvenile specimens of a new species of Oreaster were collected at Parque Nacional Arrecife Alacranes and Triángulos Oeste in the southern Gulf of Mexico. DNA of mitochondrial loci identifies them as members of the same clade as cloning larvae of Oreaster found abundantly in waters of the Florida Current-Gulf Stream system, and distinct from Oreaster clavatus and Oreaster reticulatus, the two known Oreasteridae species in the North Atlantic. Larvae from the new species of Oreaster persist as clones but also metamorphose and settle to the benthos with typical asteroid morphology.
Asunto(s)
Estrellas de Mar/clasificación , Estrellas de Mar/crecimiento & desarrollo , Animales , Golfo de México , Larva/clasificación , Larva/crecimiento & desarrollo , Metamorfosis Biológica , Polimorfismo de Nucleótido Simple , Análisis de Secuencia de ADN , Especificidad de la Especie , Estrellas de Mar/genéticaRESUMEN
The development to metamorphosis of the shallow-water antarctic sea urchin, Sterechinus neumayeri, is described for the first time. Developmental stages are similar to those of closely related temperate species with feeding larvae, but the rate of development is extremely slow. Hatching of ciliated blastulae occurs approximately 140, 128, and 110 hours after fertilization at -1.8, -1.0, and -0.5°C, respectively, more than twice the time required for closely related temperate species near their normal ambient temperature. Larvae reared at -1.8 to -0.9°C are capable of feeding 20 days after fertilization and are competent to metamorphose after 115 days. Early cleavage embryos, blastulae, gastrulae, and prism larvae of this species were collected from the plankton adjacent to McMurdo Station, Antarctica, in early November and December, 1984 and 1985. Echinoplutei were not found during this study, but they have been collected from the plankton in other years; there is no evidence that the larvae are demersal. The timing of spawning ensures that feeding larvae are in the plankton during the abbreviated summer peak of phytoplankton abundance in McMurdo Sound. Recruitment of juveniles into the benthos most likely occurs in synchrony with the subsequent period of high levels of benthic chl a concentrations.