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CULTURE STUDIES ON THE MARINE GREEN ALGA HALICYSTIS PARVULA—DERBESIA TENUISSIMA. II. SYNCHRONY AND PERIODICITY IN GAMETE FORMATION AND RELEASE
Author(s) -
Page Joanna Ziegler,
Kingsbury John M.
Publication year - 1968
Publication title -
american journal of botany
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.218
H-Index - 151
eISSN - 1537-2197
pISSN - 0002-9122
DOI - 10.1002/j.1537-2197.1968.tb06937.x
Subject(s) - gamete , biology , botany , population , gametophyte , darkness , sperm , pollen , demography , sociology
Unialgal cultures of the macroscopic, vesicular, coenocytic gametophyte ( Halicystis parvula Schmitz) of Derbesia tenuissima (DeNotaris) Crouan fr. were grown under various environmental regimes to elucidate the cytology of gamete formation and the factors controlling synchronous gamete formation and release. No synchrony of nuclear division was observed in vegetative plants or during the early stages of gamete formation. In the later stages of gamete formation in plants in a light‐dark cycle, nuclear divisions within any gametangium were synchronous, and the stages of gamete formation were synchronous for the population. This synchrony was not as great for plants in continuous light. Gametes of plants in a light‐dark cycle were released explosively immediately following the dark‐to‐light transition. Release was random and much less forceful for plants in continuous light. After a certain stage of gamete formation, gamete release was timed to occur after a particular interval of darkness, but release could be triggered by light during the last portion of this interval. The length of the dark interval was shorter for male plants than for females, but the period of light sensitivity was longer for females. Formation of gametangia by series of isolated plants was also synchronous and sometimes periodic under certain conditions. Intervals between gametangia on the same plant varied from 2 to 14 days but were usually 4 or 5 days (unlike plants in nature, which show a bi‐ or tri‐weekly periodicity). Male and female plants did not differ in synchrony or periodicity. Different media affected the number of gametangia formed over a period of time but not the synchrony of formation. Under some conditions changing the medium had a stimulating or synchronizing effect. Non‐repeated temperature changes also synchronized gamete formation. Optimum temperature for continued gamete formation was about 21 C. Regular daily light and temperature variation together maintained synchronous and periodic gamete formation in populations of isolated plants. Reproduction diminished and became less synchronous at constant temperature either in continuous light or under a light‐dark schedule, although in the light‐dark regime steps in the formation of any given gametangium remained synchronous with the light‐dark cycle. Length of times between gametangial formation on individual plants showed a tendency to occur in multiples of the usual period lengths; e.g., plants sometimes tend to “skip” intervals, thus maintaining the synchrony of the population. These results suggest that interaction between daily environmental cycles and an endogenous physiological cycle may maintain periodic reproduction.

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