Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4398151 Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 2006 10 Pages PDF
Abstract
The inhalant siphon of the tellinacean bivalve Nuttallia olivacea is an important prey item for juvenile stone flounder Platichthys bicoloratus in estuaries in Japan. We examined quantitative siphon regeneration of N. olivacea in rearing experiments of siphon-removed bivalves (> 30 mm shell length) both in the laboratory and in their natural habitat. Under laboratory conditions, siphon-removed bivalves regenerated lost tissues quantitatively at 15 and 25 °C 1 mo after siphon removal, although regeneration was incomplete. A 3-mo caging experiment in the field showed that great regeneration occurred in siphon-removed bivalves. However, the siphon weight of removed bivalves was significantly smaller than that of non-amputated bivalves, suggesting the incomplete regeneration. In a 1-mo caging experiment, bivalves that had approximately 15% of their siphons amputated were selected at some intervals to illustrate the quantitative regeneration process. Estimated daily siphon production was remarkably high only a few days after amputation. It decreased greatly thereafter, but regeneration was not completed within 30 d. These results indicate that bivalves regenerate siphons rapidly just after losing siphon tissues and then regeneration is slowed down before it is completed.
Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Aquatic Science
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