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Transport And Metabolism Of Alanine And Palmitic Acid By Field-Collected Larvae Of Tedania Ignis (Porifera, Demospongiae): Estimated Consequences Of Limited Label Translocation, William B. Jaeckle Oct 1995

Transport And Metabolism Of Alanine And Palmitic Acid By Field-Collected Larvae Of Tedania Ignis (Porifera, Demospongiae): Estimated Consequences Of Limited Label Translocation, William B. Jaeckle

Scholarship

The epidermis of larvae of Tedania ignis(Porifera, Demospongiae) is uniformly ciliated except for the posterior pole. The epidermal cells are long, columnar, and monociliate; each cilium arises from an epidermal crypt; symbiotic bacteria were not observed in larval cells. These lecithotrophic ("nonfeeding") larvae can feed by assimilating dissolved organic materials (DOM) from seawater. Larvae transported both the amino acid alanine (mean = 2.73 pmol larva-1 h-1; [S] = 1 µM) and the fatty acid palmitic acid (mean = 16.27 pmol larva-1 h-1; [S] = 1 µM) from seawater. Following assimilation, the …


Transport And Metabolism Of Alanine And Palmitic Acid By Field-Collected Larvae Of Tedania Ignis (Porifera, Demospongiae): Estimated Consequences Of Limited Label Translocation, William Jaeckle Oct 1995

Transport And Metabolism Of Alanine And Palmitic Acid By Field-Collected Larvae Of Tedania Ignis (Porifera, Demospongiae): Estimated Consequences Of Limited Label Translocation, William Jaeckle

William Jaeckle

The epidermis of larvae of Tedania ignis(Porifera, Demospongiae) is uniformly ciliated except for the posterior pole. The epidermal cells are long, columnar, and monociliate; each cilium arises from an epidermal crypt; symbiotic bacteria were not observed in larval cells. These lecithotrophic ("nonfeeding") larvae can feed by assimilating dissolved organic materials (DOM) from seawater. Larvae transported both the amino acid alanine (mean = 2.73 pmol larva-1 h-1; [S] = 1 µM) and the fatty acid palmitic acid (mean = 16.27 pmol larva-1 h-1; [S] = 1 µM) from seawater. Following assimilation, the label from alanine was recovered primarily in small molecular …


Cells Are Not Just Bags Of Water: A Personal Appreciation Of The Work Of Dr. Brij L. Gupta And His Contribution To Biological X-Ray Microanalysis, Alice Warley Aug 1995

Cells Are Not Just Bags Of Water: A Personal Appreciation Of The Work Of Dr. Brij L. Gupta And His Contribution To Biological X-Ray Microanalysis, Alice Warley

Scanning Microscopy

This paper surveys the contribution made by the work of Dr. B.L. Gupta to the science of biological X-ray microanalysis. A brief biographical sketch of Brij's early years is given, this is followed by considerations about the models for water transport across epithelia. The ultrastructural and histochemical studies carried out by Brij Gupta and colleagues are reviewed to introduce the historical need for the use of EPXMA for the study of ion and water transport in epithelia. The outstanding contribution made by Brij Gupta's work in this field is outlined, and his understanding of the subcellular distribution ions in other …


Impacts Of Seasonality And Nutrients On Microbial Mat Community Structure And Function, James L. Pinckney, Hans W. Paerl, M. Fitzpatrick Jul 1995

Impacts Of Seasonality And Nutrients On Microbial Mat Community Structure And Function, James L. Pinckney, Hans W. Paerl, M. Fitzpatrick

Faculty Publications

To understand the mechanisms responsible for seasonal fluctuations in growth and N2 fixation in intertidal microbial mat communities, we quantified seasonal changes in mat community composition, related these changes to diel and seasonal N2 fixation rates, and evaluated community responses (growth, N2fixation, composition) to long-term (22 d) nutrient addition bioassays. A temperate intertidal cyanobacterial mat community, located in coastal North Carolina, USA, was sampled at monthly intervals for 1 yr (1993-94) to determine changes in community composition. The abundances of major phototrophic groups were quantified based on the relative concentrations of taxaspecific photopigments (chlorophylls and carotenoids). …


Community Metabolism And Nutrient Cycling In The Mississippi River Plume: Evidence For Intense Nitrification At Intermediate Salinities, Joseph D. Pakulski, Ronald Benner, Rainer Amon, Brian Eadie, Terry Whitledge Feb 1995

Community Metabolism And Nutrient Cycling In The Mississippi River Plume: Evidence For Intense Nitrification At Intermediate Salinities, Joseph D. Pakulski, Ronald Benner, Rainer Amon, Brian Eadie, Terry Whitledge

Faculty Publications

Community respiration, net nutrient fluxes and heterotrophic bacterial production were investigated in the Mississippi River (USA) plume during May 1992 using dark bottle incubations of unfiltered water. Highest rates of community O2 consumption and dissolved inorganic carbon regeneration were observed at intermediate (10 to 27%0) plume salinities. Plume surface 02 consumption rates were 2- to 4-fold greater than rates reported previously during the summer and winter. Heterotrophic bacterial production ([3H]-leucine incorporation) was also highest at intermediate salinities and 2- to 4-fold greater than rates reported from other seasons. Net regeneration of NH4+ …


Life History And Description Of Immature Stages Of Euaresta Stigmatica (Diptera: Tephritidae) On Ambrosia Spp. (Asteraceae) In Southern California, David H. Headrick, Richard D. Goeden, Jeffrey A. Teerink Jan 1995

Life History And Description Of Immature Stages Of Euaresta Stigmatica (Diptera: Tephritidae) On Ambrosia Spp. (Asteraceae) In Southern California, David H. Headrick, Richard D. Goeden, Jeffrey A. Teerink

Horticulture and Crop Science

Euaresta stigmatica Coquillett is bivoltine and nearly monophagous on four native ragweeds, Ambrosia spp. (Asteraceae), in the southwestern United States. In southern California, larvae of the spring (F1) generation develop singly in and feed on one or both ovules of young fruiting involucres of Ambrosia ilicifolia (Gray) Payne, with a small proportion infesting the staminate involucres. Adults emerge after ≈1 mo, with their reproductive organs immature. The F2 generation develops in the involucres of fall-blooming Ambrosia acanthicarpa Hooker. The egg is described and illustrated for the first time for any species of Euaresta. First, second, and …