Abstract

Individuals of Arbacia punctulata (Lamarck) from Woods Hole, Massachusetts, and the northeastern Gulf of Mexico were reared from fertilized eggs through metamorphosis under comparable laboratory conditions. Interpopulation differences in spine length development were significant between pure-bred offsprings of these two widely separated geographic areas. Spine lengths of hybrid urchins were intermediate to pure-bred animals. Interpopulation differentiation of specific portions of the genome is proposed to account for the observed phenotypic variation in spine length.

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