Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand abstracts
Observations on the reproduction and development of Liothyrella
neozelanica Thomson 1918 (Terebratulacea, Articulata, Brachiopoda)
Shou Hwa Chuang*
Mature individuals of the terebratulid brachiopod
Liothyrella
neozelanica Thomson, collected from Doubtful Sound on 25-26 February 1990
at Campbell Kingdom, spawned in the laboratory. The females brooded their
opaque, white zygotes, embryos and larvae in the space bounded by the brachial
membrane and its associated cirri in the apical region of the median spiral arm
of the plectolophe. The coeloblastula gastrulated by invagination. The circular
blastopore gradually elongated during gastrulation. Cilia, which first appeared
during the gastrula stage, completely covered the embryo and persisted
throughout larval life. The cylindroid gastrula developed into a wedge-shaped
larva, which returned to a cylindroid shape before the mantle fold appeared.
Two grooves formed on each side of the mantle fold to constrict the larva into
a three-lobed body without eye spots. An occasional two-lobed stage intervened
whenever the two grooves developed asynchronously. Three-lobed larvae could be
classified by morphological features into early, late and pre-settlement
stages. Large ova developed into large larvae or occasionally into large
incomplete larvae. Small ova produced miniature but otherwise normal larvae and
some miniature incomplete larvae. Incomplete larvae did not differentiate
further, had no pedicle lobe, and soon died. The reproduction and development
of this species were discussed.
Keywords: Liothyrella neozelanica, Brachiopoda, articulate,
terebratulid, reproduction, larval development
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