3 resultados para red-light

em Acceda, el repositorio institucional de la Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. España


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Se estudió el papel de la longitud de onda de la luz (color) en el grado de actividad motriz de tres especies de pepino de mar (Holothuria sanctori, H. dakarensis y H. arguinensis). Con independencia del tamaño de los individuos, H. sanctori prefiere los ambientes oscuros, permaneciendo inactiva en zonas iluminadas con independencia del color de la luz. H. dakarensis muestra actividad bajo luz roja, y H. arguinensis prefiere ambientes oscuros pero su desplazamiento es mayor en presencia de luz azul. ABSTRACT: The effect of the light wave length on the degree of activity of three species of sea cucumbers (Holothuria sanctori, H. dakarensis and H. arguinensis) was studied. Regardless of individuals sizes, H. sanctori prefered dark environments; this species remained inactive in illuminated areas regardless of the light colour. H. dakarensis showed activity under red light and H. arguinensis preferred dark environments, though its displacement was larger under blue light.

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[EN]Multicellular red algae (Rhodophyta) have some of the most complex life cycles known in living organisms. Economically valuable seaweeds, such as phycocolloid producers, have a triphasic (gametophyte, carposporophyte, and tetrasporophyte) life cycle, not to mention the intricate alternation of generations in the edible “sushi-alga” nori. It is a well-known fact that reproductive processes are controlled by one or more abiotic factor(s), including day length, light quality, temperature, and nutrients. Likewise, endogenous chemical factors such as plant growth regulators have been reported to affect reproductive events in some red seaweeds. Still, in the genomic era and given the high throughput techniques at our disposal, our knowledge about the endogenous molecular machinery lags far behind that of higher plants.