Abstract

Ciliary feeders vary in the arrangement of ciliary bands and mechanisms of capture of food. Some larvae use opposed parallel bands of preoral (prototroch) and postoral (metatroch) cilia. Hypotheses for the mechanism of particle capture include filtration by adhesion to a cilium that overtakes a particle (direct interception), but until now unequivocal evidence for this mechanism has been lacking. Here, high-speed video recordings of veliger larvae of the gastropod Lacuna vincta demonstrated direct interception of particles by prototrochal cilia. Adhesion between cilium and particle was seen when a prototrochal cilium tugged a diatom chain into the food groove while in contact with one part of the chain. In several recorded events, a prototochal cilium overtook a particle during its effective stroke and subsequently pulled the particle inward with its recovery stroke; thereupon, the particle was deposited onto the food groove and transported to the mouth. Captures varied, however. In some cases the particle was intercepted multiple times in one capture event; in others, several cilia passed a particle without interception. Particles occasionally remained in the area of recovery strokes, indicating retention without continuing adhesion to a cilium. In three events, a particle lost from prototrochal cilia was intercepted and moved into the food groove by metatrochal cilia. Particles as wide as or wider than the food groove were also captured and transported but were not ingested.

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