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Excess potassium induces larval metamorphosis in four marine invertebrate species

TLDR
The ability of K+ to directly influence cell membrane potential is proposed as an explanation for its broad effectiveness as a metamorphic inducer for larvae that recruit to different habitats.
Abstract
An increase in the concentration of K@in defined seawater medium induces settlement and metamorphosis in larvae of the marine molluscs Phestilla sibogae, Haliotis rufescens, and Astraea undosa, and in larvae of the marine annelid Phrag matopoma californica. The effect is dose-dependent, optimal at approximately double the normal concentration of K@in seawater, and specific for the K@ion. The ability of K@to directly influence cell membrane potential is proposed as an explanation for its broad effectiveness as a metamorphic inducer for larvae that recruit to different habitats. Depolarization ofexternally accessible, excitable cells thus is suggested to be a mechanism common to the induction ofsettlement and metamorphosis ofa number ofspecies. For Phestilla and Haliotis, the inductive effect ofexcess K@is additive with that of the substratum-derived inducers or analogs. The sensitivity of induction by K@ to external tetraethylammonium (TEA, a K@-channelblocker) reported previously for Haliotis (Baloun and Morse, 1984) is not present in Phestilla or Phragmatopoma. Results presented here indicate that the addition of excess K@may provide a widely useful technique for inducing metamorphosis, and for analyzing the mechanisms which govern this process, in other marine invertebrate larvae.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Settlement of benthic marine invertebrates

TL;DR: This review analyses the settlement process, attempting to integrate aspects related to different levels of organization (i.e. ecological-physiological-molecular) and using the use of artificial inducers in studying settlement induction, until more effective natural inducers are isolated and characterized.
Journal ArticleDOI

Control of larval metamorphosis and recruitment in sympatric agariciid corals

TL;DR: For these sympatric shallow-water agariciid corals, larval metamorphosis and recruitment are not wholly stochastic lottery-like processes, but instead appear to be determined, in part, by larval recognition of and responses to, environmental and biochemical factors that can be experimentally resolved and identified.
Journal ArticleDOI

Delayed metamorphosis by larvae of benthic marine invertebrates: Does it occur? Is there a price to pay?

Jan A. Pechenik
- 01 Oct 1990 - 
TL;DR: The finding that various inorganic and organic substances can trigger the metamorphosis of benthic marine invertebrates is explored, and it is suggested that at least a few species delay meetingamorphosis in the field.
Journal ArticleDOI

Settlement and recruitment of sea urchins (Strongylocentrotus spp.) in a sea-urchin barren ground and a kelp bed: are populations regulated by settlement or post-settlement processes?

TL;DR: Reduced post-settlement mortality of newly settled individuals in the barrens remains the most likely mechanism leading to the higher densities of sea urchins in barrens relative to kelp-bed habitats.
Journal ArticleDOI

The apical sensory organ of a gastropod veliger is a receptor for settlement cues

TL;DR: Results demonstrate that (1) the ASO-ablated larvae have not lost the ability to metamorphose and (2) the ions do not act only on the metamorphic-signal receptor cells, but at other sites downstream in the meetamorphic signal transduction pathway.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The influence of potassium and chloride ions on the membrane potential of single muscle fibres.

TL;DR: The most widely accepted theory of the restirng potential of muscle is that the electrical potential difference between the inside and outside of a muscle fibre arises from the concentration gradients of the potassium and chloride ions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Three pharmacologically distinct potassium channels in molluscan neurones.

TL;DR: It is concluded that three sets of potassium selective channels contribute to the outward current and that these channels can be separated pharmacologically.
Journal ArticleDOI

Anomalous rectification in the squid giant axon injected with tetraethylammonium chloride.

TL;DR: Experiments on fibers in an external medium of high potassium ion concentration demonstrate that injected tetraethylammonium chloride causes rectification of the instantaneous current-voltage curve for potassium by excluding outward current.
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γ-Aminobutyric Acid, a Neurotransmitter, Induces Planktonic Abalone Larvae to Settle and Begin Metamorphosis

TL;DR: Halogenated organic pesticides significantly interfere with larval settling, as quantified in a new bioassay based upon these findings.
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