Harmothoe imbricata MicroCT-scans for 3D reconstruction

Annelids are predominantly found along the seafloor, but over time have colonised a vast diversity of habitats, such as the water column, where different modes of locomotion are necessary. Yet, little is known about their potential muscular adaptation to the continuously swimming required in the wat...

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Main Authors: Allentoft-Larsen, Marc Christian, Gonzalez, Brett C., Daniels, Joost, Katija, Kakani, Osborn, Karen, Worsaae, Katrine
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Dryad 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.gqnk98smq
http://datadryad.org/stash/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.gqnk98smq
id ftdatacite:10.5061/dryad.gqnk98smq
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
topic musculature
scale worms
3D reconstruction
tomography
morphology
spellingShingle musculature
scale worms
3D reconstruction
tomography
morphology
Allentoft-Larsen, Marc Christian
Gonzalez, Brett C.
Daniels, Joost
Katija, Kakani
Osborn, Karen
Worsaae, Katrine
Harmothoe imbricata MicroCT-scans for 3D reconstruction
topic_facet musculature
scale worms
3D reconstruction
tomography
morphology
description Annelids are predominantly found along the seafloor, but over time have colonised a vast diversity of habitats, such as the water column, where different modes of locomotion are necessary. Yet, little is known about their potential muscular adaptation to the continuously swimming required in the water column. The musculature and motility were examined for five scale worm species of Polynoidae (Aphroditiformia, Annelida) found in shallow waters, deep sea and caves that exhibit crawling, occasional swimming or continuous swimming, respectively. Their parapodial musculature was reconstructed using microCT and computational 3D analyses and the muscular functions interpreted from video recordings of their locomotion. Since most benthic annelids are able to swim for short distances using body and parapodial muscle movements, suitable musculature for swimming and a pelagic lifestyle is already present. Our results also indicate that rather than rearrangements or addition of muscles, a shift to a pelagic lifestyle is mainly accompanied by structural loss of muscle bundles and density, as well as elongation of extrinsic dorsal and ventral parapodial muscles. In addition, our study documents clear differences in locomotion and muscular arrangement among closely related annelids with different lifestyles as well as points to myoanatomical adaptations for accessing the water column. : All microCT scans were made at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, Washington D.C., USA. Scans were obtained from at least two individuals from each species for a resolution of 102.0 um/voxel for G. jameensis; 112.6um/voxel for P. iliffei; 71.208um/voxel for M. longipalpa; 103.3um/voxel for H. imbricata and 63.9um/voxel for Branchipolynoe sp. Specimens not already fixed in ethanol were dehydrated through a dilution series to70% ethanol. Postprocessing was done over a 2-3 step process from the initial fixative to DI-water, followed by an additional 3-5 incremental steps from water to 70% ethanol. Once in 70% ethanol, all animals were placed in either individual vials or 6-well plates covered with parafilm containing 0.3-0.6% PTA (phosphotungstic acid)in 70% ethanol. Samples were kept at room temperature with gentle rocking from 5-15 days. Fresh PTA was exchanged every 3-4 days. After staining, samples were washed with 70% ethanol over 2-3 days at room temperature with gentle rocking and regular rinsing. After rinsing, samples were prepared for scanning by being individually placed in pipette tips filled with either 70% ethanol or with 0.5% low melt agarose made with DI-water. Tips were pre-sealed at the bottom by melting over a flame before adding the sample, ethanol, or agarose. Melted paraffin was used to seal the tops of the pipette tips. To create a mount for the specimens, a single pipette tip was cut in half and hot-glued to ~2 mm carbon rod, then in turn, each specimen within their own pipette tip, was nested within the halved pipette tip and secured using dental wax. All specimens were scanned using the nanotube (180kV) on the GE Phoenix v|tome|x M 240/180kV Dual Tube micro CT machine. : Please read the ReadMe file. The dataset contains a zipfile with all the raw data images and an AM-file which is the Amira file containing the labels (reconstructed muscles). Simply unpack the zipfile to access the raw data scans. The AM file and the raw data scans can be imported into Amira or another suitable software, i.e. Fiji or IMARIS. The AM file can be imported alone in above mentioned software but will, in that case only show the labels (reconstructed muscles). The specimens were collected in 2018 at Kaldbak Fjord, Kaldbak, the Faroe Islands at 1-2m depth. Specimen condition is good and scanning resolution is high. The complex muscle structure can make it difficult to orientate in body scans.
format Dataset
author Allentoft-Larsen, Marc Christian
Gonzalez, Brett C.
Daniels, Joost
Katija, Kakani
Osborn, Karen
Worsaae, Katrine
author_facet Allentoft-Larsen, Marc Christian
Gonzalez, Brett C.
Daniels, Joost
Katija, Kakani
Osborn, Karen
Worsaae, Katrine
author_sort Allentoft-Larsen, Marc Christian
title Harmothoe imbricata MicroCT-scans for 3D reconstruction
title_short Harmothoe imbricata MicroCT-scans for 3D reconstruction
title_full Harmothoe imbricata MicroCT-scans for 3D reconstruction
title_fullStr Harmothoe imbricata MicroCT-scans for 3D reconstruction
title_full_unstemmed Harmothoe imbricata MicroCT-scans for 3D reconstruction
title_sort harmothoe imbricata microct-scans for 3d reconstruction
publisher Dryad
publishDate 2021
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.gqnk98smq
http://datadryad.org/stash/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.gqnk98smq
long_lat ENVELOPE(-6.828,-6.828,62.061,62.061)
geographic Faroe Islands
Kaldbak
geographic_facet Faroe Islands
Kaldbak
genre Faroe Islands
genre_facet Faroe Islands
op_rights Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal
https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode
cc0-1.0
op_rightsnorm CC0
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.gqnk98smq
_version_ 1765996239383429120
spelling ftdatacite:10.5061/dryad.gqnk98smq 2023-05-15T16:11:07+02:00 Harmothoe imbricata MicroCT-scans for 3D reconstruction Allentoft-Larsen, Marc Christian Gonzalez, Brett C. Daniels, Joost Katija, Kakani Osborn, Karen Worsaae, Katrine 2021 https://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.gqnk98smq http://datadryad.org/stash/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.gqnk98smq en eng Dryad Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode cc0-1.0 CC0 musculature scale worms 3D reconstruction tomography morphology dataset Dataset 2021 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.gqnk98smq 2022-02-08T13:02:41Z Annelids are predominantly found along the seafloor, but over time have colonised a vast diversity of habitats, such as the water column, where different modes of locomotion are necessary. Yet, little is known about their potential muscular adaptation to the continuously swimming required in the water column. The musculature and motility were examined for five scale worm species of Polynoidae (Aphroditiformia, Annelida) found in shallow waters, deep sea and caves that exhibit crawling, occasional swimming or continuous swimming, respectively. Their parapodial musculature was reconstructed using microCT and computational 3D analyses and the muscular functions interpreted from video recordings of their locomotion. Since most benthic annelids are able to swim for short distances using body and parapodial muscle movements, suitable musculature for swimming and a pelagic lifestyle is already present. Our results also indicate that rather than rearrangements or addition of muscles, a shift to a pelagic lifestyle is mainly accompanied by structural loss of muscle bundles and density, as well as elongation of extrinsic dorsal and ventral parapodial muscles. In addition, our study documents clear differences in locomotion and muscular arrangement among closely related annelids with different lifestyles as well as points to myoanatomical adaptations for accessing the water column. : All microCT scans were made at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, Washington D.C., USA. Scans were obtained from at least two individuals from each species for a resolution of 102.0 um/voxel for G. jameensis; 112.6um/voxel for P. iliffei; 71.208um/voxel for M. longipalpa; 103.3um/voxel for H. imbricata and 63.9um/voxel for Branchipolynoe sp. Specimens not already fixed in ethanol were dehydrated through a dilution series to70% ethanol. Postprocessing was done over a 2-3 step process from the initial fixative to DI-water, followed by an additional 3-5 incremental steps from water to 70% ethanol. Once in 70% ethanol, all animals were placed in either individual vials or 6-well plates covered with parafilm containing 0.3-0.6% PTA (phosphotungstic acid)in 70% ethanol. Samples were kept at room temperature with gentle rocking from 5-15 days. Fresh PTA was exchanged every 3-4 days. After staining, samples were washed with 70% ethanol over 2-3 days at room temperature with gentle rocking and regular rinsing. After rinsing, samples were prepared for scanning by being individually placed in pipette tips filled with either 70% ethanol or with 0.5% low melt agarose made with DI-water. Tips were pre-sealed at the bottom by melting over a flame before adding the sample, ethanol, or agarose. Melted paraffin was used to seal the tops of the pipette tips. To create a mount for the specimens, a single pipette tip was cut in half and hot-glued to ~2 mm carbon rod, then in turn, each specimen within their own pipette tip, was nested within the halved pipette tip and secured using dental wax. All specimens were scanned using the nanotube (180kV) on the GE Phoenix v|tome|x M 240/180kV Dual Tube micro CT machine. : Please read the ReadMe file. The dataset contains a zipfile with all the raw data images and an AM-file which is the Amira file containing the labels (reconstructed muscles). Simply unpack the zipfile to access the raw data scans. The AM file and the raw data scans can be imported into Amira or another suitable software, i.e. Fiji or IMARIS. The AM file can be imported alone in above mentioned software but will, in that case only show the labels (reconstructed muscles). The specimens were collected in 2018 at Kaldbak Fjord, Kaldbak, the Faroe Islands at 1-2m depth. Specimen condition is good and scanning resolution is high. The complex muscle structure can make it difficult to orientate in body scans. Dataset Faroe Islands DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Faroe Islands Kaldbak ENVELOPE(-6.828,-6.828,62.061,62.061)