Hostname: page-component-7479d7b7d-pfhbr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-12T21:20:14.587Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Squid Gill - a System for Studying Biorhythms

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 July 2020

T. Guha
Affiliation:
Electron Microscope Center, Department of Physics, University College of Science, Calcutta University, 92, A. P. C. Road, Calcutta- 700009, India
A. Sen
Affiliation:
Electron Microscope Center, Department of Physics, University College of Science, Calcutta University, 92, A. P. C. Road, Calcutta- 700009, India
R. L. Brahmachary
Affiliation:
Honorary Scientist, Marine Aquarium and Research Center, Digha, West Bengal, India
Get access

Extract

It is well known that cephalopods ( octopus, squid, cuttle fish etc. ) have various pulsatile systems in their bodies. We have now used the gills of Loliolus investigatoris and Loligo dauvauceli, two small squids found in the Bay of Bengal, as a system for studying such autonomous pulsations. The gills excised out of squids cast on the beach from fishing nets can be maintained in pasteurised sea water for 3 4 or 5 days in petri dish where they continue to execute the rhythmic movements.

The gill samples were fixed in 2% Gluteraldehyde in 0.1M Phosphate buffer (pH 7.4).for 48 hours, then washed with filtered pasteurised sea water, followed by washing in distilled water, dehydration in acetone and critical point drying in liquid CO2 and coating with gold.

Fig. 1.depicts an ablated gill which executes an oscillatory motion as a whole; more importantly, the individual finger like projections shown in fig. 2, exhibit rhythmic lateral movements and the blood-vessels, as a result of constrictions and dilation, seem to “tick” like a clock in rapid succession. Periodicity of the gill swinging as a whole is about one swing per 7-8 seconds, for the sidewise swing it varied from 35 to 70 seconds in one gill, 11-39 in another while the “ticking” is about once a second. This last one is, however, lost after a few hours.

Type
Non-Vertebrate Biology
Copyright
Copyright © Microscopy Society of America 1997

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

l.Brahmachary, R.L., Molluscs in Reproductive Biology of Invertebrates, Eds. Adiyodi, R.G. and Adiyodi, K.G. ( Oxford (India) and IBH; foreign edition John Wiley, London ) (1989).Google Scholar
2.Bunning, E., Physiological Clocks, Springer Verlag (1965).Google Scholar
3.Brahmachary, L., Int. Rev. Cytol. 21 (1967) 65.10.1016/S0074-7696(08)60811-6CrossRefGoogle Scholar
4.The authors acknowledge the help of Mr. S. C. Maikap of RSIC, Bose Institute, in Scanning Electron Microscopy.Google Scholar