The effects of multiple infections on the host-parasite relationship between bluegill sunfish (Lepomis macrochirus) and parasitic glochidial larvae of the freshwater mussel Utterbackia imbecillis were examined. Naïve, young-of-the-year bluegills were infected with glochidia and placed in individual observation chambers. Each day, water was drained from each chamber and the numbers of dead glochidia, live glochidia, partially metamorphosed glochidia, and fully metamorphosed juvenile mussels were counted. The same fishes were infected a total of 4 times. After 2 infections, the fish began to exhibit evidence of acquired resistance to glochidia. During the third and fourth infections, this resistance was clearly evidenced by the marked increase in the percentage of dead and live glochidia shed during the first 5 days of the infection and by the significant decrease in the success of metamorphosis. The total number of glochidia that successfully attached to the fish decreased significantly during the fourth infection relative to the first. The number of larvae attached to the host fish was positively correlated with the size of the fish during the first infection but was negatively correlated during all subsequent infections. Variance to mean ratios indicated that larvae were aggregated among host fishes during the infections. This study has important implications in propagation and conservation efforts of this endangered group of organisms.
SUMMARYThis study examines calcification in planulae and polyps of the hydroid Hydractinia symbiolongicarpus. We observed that established colonies produce a crystalline mat on their substratum and that crystals visible by polarized light microscopy occur in the vacuoles of the gastrodermal cells of both polyps and planulae. The crystalline mat was found by infrared spectroscopy to contain calcium carbonate in the form of aragonite. The composition of the vacuolar crystals and the cellular mechanisms for manufacturing them were explored by alteration of calcium levels in the environment and by the use of pharmacological agents (acetazolamide, caffeine, DIDS, diltiazem, nifedipine, procaine, Ruthenium Red, ryanodine and verapamil) that affect cellular uptake and transport of calcium and bicarbonate. The results indicated that the crystals in the vacuoles contained calcium carbonate. The gastrodermal cells are hypothesized to serve as a physiological sink for excess calcium that enters the organism during motility, secretion and metamorphosis of the planula, and to create a crystalline substratum for the colony of polyps.
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