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The World of Protozoa, Rotifera, Nematoda and Oligochaeta

Ref ID : 1628

John J. Gilbert; Structure, development and induction of a new diapause stage in rotifers. Freshwater Biology 34:263-270, 1995

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1. This study shows that females of Synchaeta pectinata Ehrenberg can produce two morphologically and physiologically distinct kinds of amictic eggs that develop parthenogenetically into females. One kind, until now the only one known in monogonont rotifers, is a thin-shelled (about 1.4 um) subitaneous egg that develops without arrest. The other kind is a thick-shelled (about 9 µm) egg that enters obligatory dapause after 1-3 cleavage divisions before resuming development. Thicker shell of the diapausing egg is due to an expansion of the outer sublayer of the single-layered shell. 2. The mean duration of the diapause at 19 degrees C (L:D=16:8) is about 14 days. This diapause is not broken by low temperature (5 degrees C), and it is not greatly extended by storage at low temperature (5 degrees C). 3. Diapausing eggs are induced immediately after a brief starvation period, and seem to be produced at no additional energetic cost. However, a population producing a high proportion of diapausing eggs has a much reduced reproductive potential. 4. Production of diapausing amictic eggs may be a strategy to increase the ability of clones to survive food limitation. 5. Diapausing amictic eggs differ markedly from fertilized resting eggs produced following bisexual reproduction during favourable conditions.