Abstract

Post-hatching development of the brain in the oegopsid squid, Todarodes pacificus was described using conventional histological and Cajal's silver impregnation methods. The oegopsid squids spend a specific paralarval period before attaining adult-like juveniles. In the just-hatched paralarvae, the brain lobes (lower and intermediate motor centers) are differentiating only in the ventral part of the brain (subesophageal mass, SBM), and development of the dorsal part of the brain (supraesophageal mass, SPM) shows a heterochronic delay. In the SPM, an arched bundle of axonal tracts (transverse arch, TA) crosses the region over the oral ingrowth. In the early paralarval period, the basal lobes and precommissural lobe (higher motor centers) begin to develop along the TA. A little later, a pair of longitudinal axonal tracts (supraesophageal ladder, SPRL) elongates anteriorly from the TA, and accessory lobes (centers for memory and learning) and superior buccal lobes begin to differentiate along the SPRL. In the mid paralarval period, the lobes of the olfactory center and the peduncle lobe develop well in each optic tract region. In the late paralarvae, all brain lobes become identifiable and the brain shows substantially the same organization as that in the adults. The dorsal-most region of the SPM largely increases in volume with striking growth of the accessory lobes. The SBM elongates in anterior and posterior directions and the rostral end (anterior SBM) separates from the middle SBM. The optic lobes become very large with neuropils arranged in layers. In the juveniles, the neuropils increase in relative volume to the perikaryal layers, and neuronal somata enlarge markedly in some lobes. The retarded development of higher motor centers during paralarval development suggests that the early paralarvae of T. pacificus are not active predators but suspension feeders.

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