Scientific News Biology To unknown science animals and plants YOUNG SEA ANIMALS CLONE THEMSELVES-CENTURY-OLD DEBATE HALTED
YOUNG SEA ANIMALS
CLONE THEMSELVES-CENTURY-OLD DEBATE HALTED
After
more than a century of intensive study, scientists have assumed that larvae of
non-parasitic invertebrates reproduce only very rarely, but new research by
University of Alberta scientists overthrows this conventional wisdom. Graduate
student Alexandra Eaves and Dr. Richard Palmer, from the U of A's Faculty of
Science, have found that asexual cloning by some marine invertebrate larvae is
not as rare and enigmatic a phenomenon as previously assumed.
"A wealth of knowledge of how embryos grow
has come from studying sea urchin development," said Eaves. "The
discovery that these young animals can clone themselves provides an exceedingly
rare opportunity to examine how a growing animal can repeat its own early
development using a part of its body."
Scattered earlier reports have observed that
invertebrate larvae can spontaneously clone but Eaves and Palmer discovered this
trait in three new echinoderm groups--sea cucumbers, sand dollars, and sea
urchins--offering surprising new insight about chordate evolution. Larval
cloning represents an intriguing new dimension to invertebrate life histories
including the suggestion that clones may subsequently clone. The research is
published in the current edition of the prestigious journal Nature.
The larvae of echinoderms (the group that
includes starfish, sea urchins, sea cucumbers, etc.) usually swim and feed for
several months before transforming into a miniature adult. During this time some
larvae form an outgrowth -- essentially a ball of tissue -- that pinches-off of
the larval body and grows into a second, normal-looking larva--a clone.
One of the most remarkable parts about the
research is that for more than 100 years, scientists may have observed larval
asexual reproduction, but did not recognize what they saw, said Palmer. Even
more remarkably, at least one early report of larval cloning was dismissed as an
artifact of laboratory culture conditions.
"These data make it clear that people have
likely seen this spontaneous cloning for many years but not recognized it,"
said Palmer. "This is a dramatic example of what terrifies scientists the
most--when you see things with your own eyes but refuse to acknowledge it. It's
a classic example of how deeply held beliefs may actually prevent you from
seeing things."
###
Alexandra Eaves' research is supported by an
Alberta Ingenuity Fund studentship while Dr. Richard Palmer has an Natural
Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) operating grant.
Contact: Phoebe Dey, phoebe.dey@ualberta.ca,
780-492-0437, University
of Alberta
The source of the given news and copyrights
belong to the University
of Alberta
Publishing date: September 16, 2003
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