Effect of light period on egg-discharge of gametophyte clones of Undaria pinnatifida (Phaeophyta)


Autoria(s): Liu, JX; Dong, LF; Shen, YQ; Wu, CY
Data(s)

01/12/2004

Resumo

A sporeling culture method using gametophyte clones developed in the early 1990s led to egg discharge occurring in the dark 5 min after the start of the dark period under growth under a 11:13 L-D photoperiod. The course of egg discharge could be disturbed by light, with irradiance as low as 5-6 mu mol photon m(-2) s(-1) causing 75-80% of the discharged eggs to detach from the oogonia and consequently to die within several hours. In order to enhance outgrowth rate of young sporophytes, a study was conducted to test the effect of controlling darkness in the period 2-3 h after dusk. When the slides were transferred from the standard 11:13 L-D regime to continuous light, eggs were discharged 5 min after the end of the light phase and peaked 5-l5 min later on first day after transfer, indicating that the female gametes "remember" the light-dark regime. This suggests the existence of an endogenous circadian rhythm. During the second and third days, very few eggs were discharged throughout the 11 h of the normal light phase of the L-D regime, indicating the inhibitory effect of continuous light and that the rhtyhm is easily damped by light.

A sporeling culture method using gametophyte clones developed in the early 1990s led to egg discharge occurring in the dark 5 min after the start of the dark period under growth under a 11:13 L-D photoperiod. The course of egg discharge could be disturbed by light, with irradiance as low as 5-6 mu mol photon m(-2) s(-1) causing 75-80% of the discharged eggs to detach from the oogonia and consequently to die within several hours. In order to enhance outgrowth rate of young sporophytes, a study was conducted to test the effect of controlling darkness in the period 2-3 h after dusk. When the slides were transferred from the standard 11:13 L-D regime to continuous light, eggs were discharged 5 min after the end of the light phase and peaked 5-l5 min later on first day after transfer, indicating that the female gametes "remember" the light-dark regime. This suggests the existence of an endogenous circadian rhythm. During the second and third days, very few eggs were discharged throughout the 11 h of the normal light phase of the L-D regime, indicating the inhibitory effect of continuous light and that the rhtyhm is easily damped by light.

Identificador

http://ir.qdio.ac.cn/handle/337002/3203

http://www.irgrid.ac.cn/handle/1471x/166256

Idioma(s)

英语

Fonte

Liu, JX; Dong, LF; Shen, YQ; Wu, CY.Effect of light period on egg-discharge of gametophyte clones of Undaria pinnatifida (Phaeophyta),JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYCOLOGY,2004,16(6):519-521

Palavras-Chave #Biotechnology & Applied Microbiology; Marine & Freshwater Biology #circadian rhythm #egg discharge #gametophyte clone #sporeling culture #Undaria pinnatifida
Tipo

期刊论文