163 research outputs found
Cladistic analysis and new classification of the Family Tubulariidae (Hydrozoa, Anthomedusae)
Embryonic, Larval, and Juvenile Development of the Sea Biscuit Clypeaster subdepressus (Echinodermata: Clypeasteroida)
Sea biscuits and sand dollars diverged from other irregular echinoids approximately 55 million years ago and rapidly dispersed to oceans worldwide. A series of morphological changes were associated with the occupation of sand beds such as flattening of the body, shortening of primary spines, multiplication of podia, and retention of the lantern of Aristotle into adulthood. To investigate the developmental basis of such morphological changes we documented the ontogeny of Clypeaster subdepressus. We obtained gametes from adult specimens by KCl injection and raised the embryos at 26C. Ciliated blastulae hatched 7.5 h after sperm entry. During gastrulation the archenteron elongated continuously while ectodermal red-pigmented cells migrated synchronously to the apical plate. Pluteus larvae began to feed in 3 d and were 20 d old at metamorphosis; starved larvae died 17 d after fertilization. Postlarval juveniles had neither mouth nor anus nor plates on the aboral side, except for the remnants of larval spicules, but their bilateral symmetry became evident after the resorption of larval tissues. Ossicles of the lantern were present and organized in 5 groups. Each group had 1 tooth, 2 demipyramids, and 2 epiphyses with a rotula in between. Early appendages consisted of 15 spines, 15 podia (2 types), and 5 sphaeridia. Podial types were distributed in accordance to Lovén's rule and the first podium of each ambulacrum was not encircled by the skeleton. Seven days after metamorphosis juveniles began to feed by rasping sand grains with the lantern. Juveniles survived in laboratory cultures for 9 months and died with wide, a single open sphaeridium per ambulacrum, aboral anus, and no differentiated food grooves or petaloids. Tracking the morphogenesis of early juveniles is a necessary step to elucidate the developmental mechanisms of echinoid growth and important groundwork to clarify homologies between irregular urchins
Metallicity at the explosion sites of interacting transients
Context. Some circumstellar-interacting (CSI) supernovae (SNe) are produced
by the explosions of massive stars that have lost mass shortly before the SN
explosion. There is evidence that the precursors of some SNe IIn were luminous
blue variable (LBV) stars. For a small number of CSI SNe, outbursts have been
observed before the SN explosion. Eruptive events of massive stars are named as
SN impostors (SN IMs) and whether they herald a forthcoming SN or not is still
unclear. The large variety of observational properties of CSI SNe suggests the
existence of other progenitors, such as red supergiant (RSG) stars with
superwinds. Furthermore, the role of metallicity in the mass loss of CSI SN
progenitors is still largely unexplored. Aims. Our goal is to gain insight on
the nature of the progenitor stars of CSI SNe by studying their environments,
in particular the metallicity at their locations. Methods. We obtain
metallicity measurements at the location of 60 transients (including SNe IIn,
SNe Ibn, and SN IMs), via emission-line diagnostic on optical spectra obtained
at the Nordic Optical Telescope and through public archives. Metallicity values
from the literature complement our sample. We compare the metallicity
distributions among the different CSI SN subtypes and to those of other
core-collapse SN types. We also search for possible correlations between
metallicity and CSI SN observational properties. Results. We find that SN IMs
tend to occur in environments with lower metallicity than those of SNe IIn.
Among SNe IIn, SN IIn-L(1998S-like) SNe show higher metallicities, similar to
those of SNe IIL/P, whereas long-lasting SNe IIn (1988Z-like) show lower
metallicities, similar to those of SN IMs. The metallicity distribution of SNe
IIn can be reproduced by combining the metallicity distributions of SN IMs
(that may be produced by major outbursts of massive stars like LBVs) and SNe
IIP (produced by RSGs). The same applies to the distributions of the Normalized
Cumulative Rank (NCR) values, which quantifies the SN association to H II
regions. For SNe IIn, we find larger mass-loss rates and higher CSM velocities
at higher metallicities. The luminosity increment in the optical bands during
SN IM outbursts tend to be larger at higher metallicity, whereas the SN IM
quiescent optical luminosities tend to be lower. Conclusions. The difference in
metallicity between SNe IIn and SN IMs suggests that LBVs are only one of the
progenitor channels for SNe IIn, with 1988Z-like and 1998S-like SNe possibly
arising from LBVs and RSGs, respectively. Finally, even though linedriven winds
likely do not primarily drive the late mass-loss of CSI SN progenitors,
metallicity has some impact on the observational properties of these
transients. Key words. supernovae: general - stars: evolution - galaxies:
abundancesComment: Submitted to Astronomy and Astrophysics on 28/02/2015; submitted to
arXiv after the 1st referee repor
Transitions in morphologies, fluid regimes, and feeding mechanisms during development of the medusa Lychnorhiza lucerna
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2016. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Inter-Research for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Marine Ecology Progress Series 557 (2016): 145-159, doi:10.3354/meps11855.The early ontogeny of scyphomedusae involves morphological and functional transitions in body plans that affect the predators’ propulsive and feeding strategies. We applied high-speed videography, digital particle image velocimetry (DPIV) and dye visualization techniques to evaluate alterations in swimming and feeding mechanisms during ontogeny of the rhizostome medusa Lychnorhiza lucerna Haeckel, 1880 (Scyphozoa, Rhizostomeae). During early ontogeny, the ephyral mouth lips develop into complex filtering structures along the oral arms. The viscous environments (Reynolds number <100) experienced by ephyrae constrain the feeding mechanisms that transport fluid during ephyral bell pulsations. In contrast, adult medusan fluid flows are dominated by inertial forces and bell pulsations effectively transport fluids and entrained prey toward the oral arms. The oral arm surfaces are covered by motile epidermal cilia that drive these entrained flows through filtering gaps in the oral arms where food particles are retained. In addition to this process within the oral arms, vortices generated during bell pulsation flow downstream along the outside of the medusae and continuously transport prey toward the exterior oral arm surfaces. Although calanoid copepods are capable of escape velocities that greatly exceed L. lucerna’s feeding current speeds, copepods often fail to detect the predator’s feeding currents or inadvertently jump into medusan capture surfaces during failed escape attempts. Consequently, the comparatively weak predator feeding currents successfully capture a portion of the copepods encountered by swimming medusae. These results clarify the processes that enable rhizostome medusae to play key roles as consumers in tropical and subtropical coastal environments.The study was partially funded by grants 2011/00436-8, 2013/19478-8, and 2014/00824-6 São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP), and CAPES PROEX2017-09-2
Three-dimensional distribution of ejecta in Supernova 1987A at 10 000 days
Due to its proximity, SN 1987A offers a unique opportunity to directly
observe the geometry of a stellar explosion as it unfolds. Here we present
spectral and imaging observations of SN 1987A obtained ~10,000 days after the
explosion with HST/STIS and VLT/SINFONI at optical and near-infrared
wavelengths. These observations allow us to produce the most detailed 3D map of
H-alpha to date, the first 3D maps for [Ca II] \lambda \lambda 7292, 7324, [O
I] \lambda \lambda 6300, 6364 and Mg II \lambda \lambda 9218, 9244, as well as
new maps for [Si I]+[Fe II] 1.644 \mu m and He I 2.058 \mu m. A comparison with
previous observations shows that the [Si I]+[Fe II] flux and morphology have
not changed significantly during the past ten years, providing evidence that it
is powered by 44Ti. The time-evolution of H-alpha shows that it is
predominantly powered by X-rays from the ring, in agreement with previous
findings. All lines that have sufficient signal show a similar large-scale 3D
structure, with a north-south asymmetry that resembles a broken dipole. This
structure correlates with early observations of asymmetries, showing that there
is a global asymmetry that extends from the inner core to the outer envelope.
On smaller scales, the two brightest lines, H-alpha and [Si I]+[Fe II] 1.644
\mu m, show substructures at the level of ~ 200 - 1000 km/s and clear
differences in their 3D geometries. We discuss these results in the context of
explosion models and the properties of dust in the ejecta.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Fauna de hidrozoários atecados (Hydrozoa, Anthoathecata) da costa do Estado do Ceará, Brasil
Another tool towards invasion? Polyp ‘‘bail-out’’ in Tubastraea coccinea
Known as a highly competitive invasive species that is spreading fast throughout the Atlantic Ocean, Tubastraea coccinea was first reported in Brazilian waters in the 1980s (Castro and Pires 2001). Since then, its occurrence has been reported across 3,000 km of the Brazilian coast, posing a major threat, particularly to sessile invertebrates.São Paulo Research Foundation— FAPESP (Grant #2012/21583-1NP-BioMar, US
Three-dimensional distribution of ejecta in Supernova 1987A at 10 000 days
Due to its proximity, SN 1987A offers a unique opportunity to directly
observe the geometry of a stellar explosion as it unfolds. Here we present
spectral and imaging observations of SN 1987A obtained ~10,000 days after the
explosion with HST/STIS and VLT/SINFONI at optical and near-infrared
wavelengths. These observations allow us to produce the most detailed 3D map of
H-alpha to date, the first 3D maps for [Ca II] \lambda \lambda 7292, 7324, [O
I] \lambda \lambda 6300, 6364 and Mg II \lambda \lambda 9218, 9244, as well as
new maps for [Si I]+[Fe II] 1.644 \mu m and He I 2.058 \mu m. A comparison with
previous observations shows that the [Si I]+[Fe II] flux and morphology have
not changed significantly during the past ten years, providing evidence that it
is powered by 44Ti. The time-evolution of H-alpha shows that it is
predominantly powered by X-rays from the ring, in agreement with previous
findings. All lines that have sufficient signal show a similar large-scale 3D
structure, with a north-south asymmetry that resembles a broken dipole. This
structure correlates with early observations of asymmetries, showing that there
is a global asymmetry that extends from the inner core to the outer envelope.
On smaller scales, the two brightest lines, H-alpha and [Si I]+[Fe II] 1.644
\mu m, show substructures at the level of ~ 200 - 1000 km/s and clear
differences in their 3D geometries. We discuss these results in the context of
explosion models and the properties of dust in the ejecta.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
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