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  • 1
    Publication Date: 1994-06-01
    Description: No information is available on the embryonic development of Southern Ocean cephalopods. Estimations of developmental times can only be made by extrapolation using data from other geographical areas. Based on known relationships between environmental temperature and embryonic development time, it appears that below 5°C even the smallest squid eggs measuring 0.6–1.0 mm in diameter need one to two months to develop to hatching. At c. 2°C, the embryonic development of these small eggs would probably cover between three and five months. Very large octopod eggs are known to develop over time spans of at least one year. Protection of the developing embryos either by long-lasting capsules laid at appropriate spawning sites, or by active ‘brooding’ (incirrate octopods) is required for embryonic survival and hatching success. The physiological conditions controlling the onset of hatching at very low temperatures are unknown; postponement of hatching appears to be common in cold waters.
    Print ISSN: 0954-1020
    Electronic ISSN: 1365-2079
    Topics: Biology , Geography , Geosciences
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  • 2
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    Elsevier
    In:  Advances in Marine Biology, 25 . pp. 85-115.
    Publication Date: 2019-02-19
    Description: Cephalopods are exclusively marine molluscs and should be included among the organisms that are of general interest to marine biologists. As to experimental embryology, Naef has already stressed the suitability of cephalopod embryos for experimental work. The whole body of information accumulated in this field during the past half century since Naef published his monograph was reviewed by Marthy. This field of research is clearly underrated by many developmental biologists who could profit by the topological simplicity of the blastulation pattern in cephalopods, which contrasts with the spiralian mode of other molluscs. Questions raised by comparative/evolutionary embryology, following the tradition of descriptive developmental morphology, are truly stimulating to the field of experimental embryology, and vice versa. However, experimental studies are generally possible with only a limited number of models, which, in the case of cephalopods, appear to be embryos of medium to small size. On the other hand, some of the most intriguing questions in cephalopod biology are related to those forms that produce eggs of extremely large size. This chapter gives a brief overview of these recent studies placing them in the chronological sequence of embryogenesis. Studies covering early stages of embryonic development as well as later ones will be cited at least once in the section dealing with the earliest stage considered. Most of these investigations ultimately rest on the basic work by Naef.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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