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Biol Bull 156: 382-392. (June 1979)
© 1979 Marine Biological Laboratory
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ANTENNULAR SENSILLA OF THE BRINE SHRIMP, ARTEMIA SALINA

GRETA E. TYSON 1 and MICHAEL L. SULLIVAN 1

1 Electron Microscope Center, Drawer EM, Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, Mississippi 39762

1. Scanning electron microscopy was used to characterize the external morphology of setae found on the antennules of adults and nauplii of the brine shrimp, Artemia salina (L.). The permeability of the antennular setae was studied by means of Slifer's crystal violet method.

2. Each antennule of an adult brine shrimp possessed a terminal cluster of sensory setae. Within a cluster there were two morphologically distinct kinds of sensilla, here designated type 1 and type 2. Three type 1 sensilla were observed on every antennule examined. The number of type 2 sensilla per antennule was usually four or five.

3. Type 1 sensilla of adults were 43 to 80 µm long and simple in external morphology. They were widest at the base, decreased in diameter gradually, and terminated as a finely tapered tip. No pores were resolved by scanning electron microscopy.

4. Type 2 sensilla of adults were shorter (shaft length, 12 to 23 µm) and displayed a single pore at the tip (average pore diameter, 0.4 µm). In thin section they were seen to possess a distinctive articular specialization of the cuticle at the base of the seta.

5. Dye penetration experiments indicated that type 2 sensilla were permeable to aqueous crystal violet, whereas type 1 sensilla were not.

6. The antennular setae of nauplii resembled type 1 sensilla in general shape, in being impermeable to crystal violet, and in lacking a terminal pore and basal articular specialization. Moreover, a total of three setae was normally present on each naupliar antennule, and the same number of type 1 sensilla was found on each adult antennule examined. If the three naupliar setae represent a developmental stage in the formation of three adult sensilla, available observations suggest that the larval setae are developmentally related to type 1, rather than to type 2 adult sensilla.







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Copyright © 1979 by the Marine Biological Laboratory.