2010
DOI: 10.1590/s0073-47212010000200006
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Ophionereis reticulata (Echinodermata, Ophiuroidea)

Abstract: ABSTRACT. This study compared the arm regeneration frequencies in two different populations of Ophionereis reticulata (Say, 1825) in São Sebastião, Southeast Brazil and observed arm regeneration between age classes (juvenile and adults) and sexes (male and female). From the 1,170 individuals sampled, 1,089 (92.2%) showed signs of arm regeneration. The relative frequencies of regenerating arms in the two areas were not different (Baleeiro Isthmus: 91.3% and Grande Beach: 99.5%). Both areas also presented simi… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…O. commutabilis shows similar percentages to A. stygobita (35% and 14%) (Carpenter 2016), another cave species. On the other hand, the regeneration frequency of O. reticulata is similar to that observed in other populations of this species and other epigean species (Lawrence and Vasquez 1996;Yokoyama and Amaral 2010). Therefore, the low incidence of damage in O. commutabilis indicates that sub-lethal predation is low inside El Aerolito as expected.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 86%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…O. commutabilis shows similar percentages to A. stygobita (35% and 14%) (Carpenter 2016), another cave species. On the other hand, the regeneration frequency of O. reticulata is similar to that observed in other populations of this species and other epigean species (Lawrence and Vasquez 1996;Yokoyama and Amaral 2010). Therefore, the low incidence of damage in O. commutabilis indicates that sub-lethal predation is low inside El Aerolito as expected.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 86%
“…Regeneration is a common process on brittle stars, caused by damage of arms through sub-lethal predation. As a result, regeneration rate of arms is often used as an estimate of predation pressure (Sköld and Rosenberg 1996;Dupont and Thorndyke 2006;Yokoyama and Amaral 2010), which in caves decreases in importance or is absent (Gibert and Deharveng 2002). The regeneration frequencies of each specimen were registered by counting the regenerating scars on the oral side.…”
Section: Regeneration Frequencymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Generally, the arms of Crinoidea (Mladenov, 1983) and Ophiuroidea, which are thin, delicate and long, regenerate faster than the arms of large Asteroidea. Ophiuroidea have a high regenerative potential, with 80-100% of them showing this ability and more than 70% of their arms regenerating simultaneously (Wilkie, 1978;Bourgoin and Guillou, 1994;Clements et al, 1994;Sköld and Rosenberg, 1996;Soong et al, 1997;Yokoyama and Amaral, 2010). In general, regardless of the class, the regeneration process and its main cellular/histological events can be divided into three main stages: a repair stage, an early regeneration stage and an advanced regeneration stage.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%