Comparative analysis and phylogenetic implications of tardigrade musculature architectures.
Most knowledge on tardigrade musculature architecture dates back to the end of XIX century, and the beginning of XX century. It has been only in the last five years that a great deal of new information on tardigrade musculature system has become available, mainly thanks to the use of rhodamine-phall...
Main Authors: | , , , , |
---|---|
Other Authors: | , , , , |
Format: | Conference Object |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Aguas e Parco biologico de Gaia, EEM/ Facultade de Ciencias da Universidade do Porto
2012
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/11380/1063099 |
_version_ | 1835015960988221440 |
---|---|
author | MARCHIORO, TREVOR REBECCHI, Lorena BERTOLANI, Roberto GUIDETTI, Roberto Hansen, J. Gulberg |
author2 | Fontoura Marchioro, Trevor Rebecchi, Lorena Hansen, J. Gulberg Bertolani, Roberto Guidetti, Roberto |
author_facet | MARCHIORO, TREVOR REBECCHI, Lorena BERTOLANI, Roberto GUIDETTI, Roberto Hansen, J. Gulberg |
author_sort | MARCHIORO, TREVOR |
collection | Unknown |
description | Most knowledge on tardigrade musculature architecture dates back to the end of XIX century, and the beginning of XX century. It has been only in the last five years that a great deal of new information on tardigrade musculature system has become available, mainly thanks to the use of rhodamine-phalloidin staining of F-actin in combination with three-dimensional microscopical techniques such as confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM). In spite of all these information, only few and fragmentary evolutionary considerations on tardigrade musculature system have been done. This is probably due to the relatively low number of analyzed taxa, and to the difficulty in the comparisons of data that often have been obtained with different degree of accuracy, and are presented using different terminologies. In this study we increased the number of analyzed species, by studying CLSM the musculature architectures of 7 species representative of most tardigrade higher taxa: the heterotardigrades Batillipes bullacaudatus (Arthrotardigrada), and Echiniscus testudo (Echiniscoidea), and the eutardigrades Paramacrobiotus richtersi, Dactylobiotus parthenogeneticus (Parachela, Macrobiotoidea), Bertolanius volubilis (Parachela, Eohypsibioidea), Acutuncus antarcticus (Parachela, Hypsibioidea) and Milnesium tardigradum (Apochela, Milnesiidae). We were able to define all the muscular fibers associated with the body movement. The number of fibers and their organization changed among taxa, with heterotardigrades being the least complex. Muscular fibers have been schematically organized into three systems: dorsal, lateral, and ventral. The ventral system was the most conservative, showing a clear metameric pattern and only few differences among taxa, while the lateral system was the most derived and so precise homologies were not always well defined. Using these new morphological information and literature data on Halobiotus crispae (Parachela, Isohypsibioidea), it was possible to analyse the phylogenetic signal of the musculature system. ... |
format | Conference Object |
genre | Acutuncus antarcticus Antarc* antarcticus Tardigrade |
genre_facet | Acutuncus antarcticus Antarc* antarcticus Tardigrade |
id | ftunivmodena:oai:iris.unimore.it:11380/1063099 |
institution | Open Polar |
language | English |
op_collection_id | ftunivmodena |
op_relation | info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/isbn/978-989-96860-7-6 ispartofbook:12th International Symposium on Tardigrada 12th International Symposium on Tardigrada volume:1 firstpage:31 lastpage:31 http://hdl.handle.net/11380/1063099 |
publishDate | 2012 |
publisher | Aguas e Parco biologico de Gaia, EEM/ Facultade de Ciencias da Universidade do Porto |
record_format | openpolar |
spelling | ftunivmodena:oai:iris.unimore.it:11380/1063099 2025-06-15T14:05:32+00:00 Comparative analysis and phylogenetic implications of tardigrade musculature architectures. MARCHIORO, TREVOR REBECCHI, Lorena BERTOLANI, Roberto GUIDETTI, Roberto Hansen, J. Gulberg Fontoura Marchioro, Trevor Rebecchi, Lorena Hansen, J. Gulberg Bertolani, Roberto Guidetti, Roberto 2012 STAMPA http://hdl.handle.net/11380/1063099 eng eng Aguas e Parco biologico de Gaia, EEM/ Facultade de Ciencias da Universidade do Porto country:PRT place:Vila Nova de Gaia info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/isbn/978-989-96860-7-6 ispartofbook:12th International Symposium on Tardigrada 12th International Symposium on Tardigrada volume:1 firstpage:31 lastpage:31 http://hdl.handle.net/11380/1063099 Musculature phylogeny tardigrada info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject 2012 ftunivmodena 2025-06-04T04:55:37Z Most knowledge on tardigrade musculature architecture dates back to the end of XIX century, and the beginning of XX century. It has been only in the last five years that a great deal of new information on tardigrade musculature system has become available, mainly thanks to the use of rhodamine-phalloidin staining of F-actin in combination with three-dimensional microscopical techniques such as confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM). In spite of all these information, only few and fragmentary evolutionary considerations on tardigrade musculature system have been done. This is probably due to the relatively low number of analyzed taxa, and to the difficulty in the comparisons of data that often have been obtained with different degree of accuracy, and are presented using different terminologies. In this study we increased the number of analyzed species, by studying CLSM the musculature architectures of 7 species representative of most tardigrade higher taxa: the heterotardigrades Batillipes bullacaudatus (Arthrotardigrada), and Echiniscus testudo (Echiniscoidea), and the eutardigrades Paramacrobiotus richtersi, Dactylobiotus parthenogeneticus (Parachela, Macrobiotoidea), Bertolanius volubilis (Parachela, Eohypsibioidea), Acutuncus antarcticus (Parachela, Hypsibioidea) and Milnesium tardigradum (Apochela, Milnesiidae). We were able to define all the muscular fibers associated with the body movement. The number of fibers and their organization changed among taxa, with heterotardigrades being the least complex. Muscular fibers have been schematically organized into three systems: dorsal, lateral, and ventral. The ventral system was the most conservative, showing a clear metameric pattern and only few differences among taxa, while the lateral system was the most derived and so precise homologies were not always well defined. Using these new morphological information and literature data on Halobiotus crispae (Parachela, Isohypsibioidea), it was possible to analyse the phylogenetic signal of the musculature system. ... Conference Object Acutuncus antarcticus Antarc* antarcticus Tardigrade Unknown |
spellingShingle | Musculature phylogeny tardigrada MARCHIORO, TREVOR REBECCHI, Lorena BERTOLANI, Roberto GUIDETTI, Roberto Hansen, J. Gulberg Comparative analysis and phylogenetic implications of tardigrade musculature architectures. |
title | Comparative analysis and phylogenetic implications of tardigrade musculature architectures. |
title_full | Comparative analysis and phylogenetic implications of tardigrade musculature architectures. |
title_fullStr | Comparative analysis and phylogenetic implications of tardigrade musculature architectures. |
title_full_unstemmed | Comparative analysis and phylogenetic implications of tardigrade musculature architectures. |
title_short | Comparative analysis and phylogenetic implications of tardigrade musculature architectures. |
title_sort | comparative analysis and phylogenetic implications of tardigrade musculature architectures. |
topic | Musculature phylogeny tardigrada |
topic_facet | Musculature phylogeny tardigrada |
url | http://hdl.handle.net/11380/1063099 |