Abstract

The ultrastructural features of gametogenesis are described in male and female colonies of the sea pen Pennatula aculeata. Specimens were collected for observation and fixation at 113 to 231 m depth in the Gulf of Maine, USA, in August 1993. The species is gonochoric, and all stages of gametogenesis are observed in both male and female colonies >45 mm in height. Gametogenesis shows several features that differ from sea anemones. The developing oocytes and sperm cysts are completely encompassed by gastrodermally derived follicle cells, and they are released from the mesenteries into the coelenteron before they are fully differentiated. Following maturation in the coelenteron, the eggs and intact sperm cysts are expelled through the mouths of the autozoids during spawning. The expulsion of sperm cysts suggests that they function as primitive spermatophores, perhaps as a way of reducing sperm dilution. Vitellogenesis results in the biosynthesis of lipid droplets which are the sole nutrient reserves in the egg. Heterosynthetic vitellogenesis is characterized by the importation of lipid precursors into the oocyte, and there is some indirect evidence that hypertrophic follicle cells play a role in production, transport, and/or mediation of these precursors. Spermatogenesis is similar to that of other anthozoans. The spermatozoon has a cone-shaped head, a posterior nuclear fossa, a ring of lipid-like bodies in the midpiece, a prominent cytoplasmic collar surrounding the proximal flagellum, and a single mitochondrion, but the posterior region of the sperm also contains previously undescribed concentric rings of cisternae resembling smooth endoplasmic reticulum.

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