Abstract

The colonial Volvocales are often said to be composed of Chlamydomonas-like cells, but there are substantial differences in motility and flagellar apparatus construction between the unicellular forms and the individual members of a colony or spheroid. These changes appear to be required for effective organismal motion and might possibly limit the rate at which new colonial forms evolve from unicellular ones. The flagellar-beat envelopes in colonial members are modified such that they beat in the same direction and in parallel planes with their effective strokes at right angles to the cellular anterior-posterior axis. These changes result from a series of developmental events of the flagellar apparatus of the colonial forms while the colony is still an embryo. Differences in the flagellar-apparatus structure in the members of the Goniaceae and Volvocaceae are not obviously correlated with the traditional placement of these algae in a simple volvocine lineage. Effective colonial motion clearly requires precise positioning and rotational orientation of the cells within the colony. Almost any arrangement where the cells are placed with rotational symmetry within the colony results in colonial progression with rotation. Such rotational symmetry is present from the time of embryogenesis. The mechanism that leads to organismal steering in behavioral responses (e.g., phototaxis) must likewise differ between colonial and unicellular forms. In at least some cases, this appears to result from changes in beat frequency in some parts of the spheroid, but changes in beat direction cannot be ruled out for all forms.

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