TL;DR: The patterns of persistence in North America indicate that other life-history traits, including mechanisms of dispersal, may be more important for surviving dramatic environmental and climatic change.
Abstract: Recent glaciation covered the full extent of rocky intertidal habitat along the coasts of New England and the Canadian Maritimes. To test whether this glaciation in fact caused wholesale extinction of obligate rocky intertidal invertebrates, and thus required a recolonization from Europe, we compared American and European populations using allelic diversity and techniques adapted from coalescent theory. Mitochondrial DNA sequences were collected from amphi-Atlantic populations of three cold-temperate obligate rocky intertidal species (a barnacle, Semibalanus bal- anoides, and two gastropods, Nucella lapillus and Littorina obtusata) and three cold-temperate habitat generalist species (a seastar, Asterias rubens; a mussel, Mytilus edulis, and an isopod, Idotea balthica). For many of these species we were able to estimate the lineage-specific mutation rate based on trans-Arctic divergences between Pacific and Atlantic taxa. These data indicate that some obligate rocky intertidal taxa have colonized New England from European pop- ulations. However, the patterns of persistence in North America indicate that other life-history traits, including mech- anisms of dispersal, may be more important for surviving dramatic environmental and climatic change.
TL;DR: It is established that the enzyme prophenoloxidase is present in the blood cells of most, but not all, crustaceans and occurs in certain other invertebrate species, notably the urochordate, C. intestinalis.
Abstract: A range of marine invertebrates were screened for prophenoloxidase (a marker protein of the prophenoloxidase activating system) in the coelomic fluid or hemolymph. The crustaceans and the ascidian, Ciona intestinalis, displayed strongest activity, with low levels found in the starfish, Asterias rubens, the sea urchin, D. antillarum, and the brachiopod, Liothyrella uva. The enzyme appeared to be absent from the isopod, Glyptonotus antarcticus. Further analyses of the blood cells of selected species revealed that prophenoloxidase tends to reside in the granular-type cells or their equivalent, and in the crustaceans and C. intestinalis is activated by lipopolysaccharides. In arthropods, prophenoloxidase is known to represent the terminal component of a complex cascade of enzymes that functions in non-self-recognition and host defence. The present study establishes that the enzyme is present in the blood cells of most, but not all, crustaceans and occurs in certain other invertebrate species, notably the urochordate, C. intestinalis.
TL;DR: This new invertebrate enzyme presents important differences when compared to previously studied lysozymes.
Abstract: Lysozyme (mucopeptide N-acetylmuramylhydrolase) from Asterias rubens was obtained in a chromatographically and electrophoretically pure state by gel filtration and affinity chromatography. The quantitative amino acid composition, the molecular weight and the N-terminal sequence determined by a sequencer are reported. This new invertebrate enzyme presents important differences when compared to previously studied lysozymes.
TL;DR: Prey size selection by crabs appears to be determined by both size-related differences in prey vulnerability, due to differential encounter rates, and active selection of larger prey.