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Brine shrimp

Artemia is a genus of aquatic crustaceans also known as brine shrimp. It is the only genus in the family Artemiidae. The first historical record of the existence of Artemia dates back to the first half of the 10th century AD from Lake Urmia, Iran, with an example called by an Iranian geographer an "aquatic dog",[2] although the first unambiguous record is the report and drawings made by Schlösser in 1757 of animals from Lymington, England.[3] Artemia populations are found worldwide, typically in inland saltwater lakes, but occasionally in oceans. Artemia are able to avoid cohabiting with most types of predators, such as fish, by their ability to live in waters of very high salinity (up to 25%).[4]

Brine shrimp
Artemia salina mating pair – female left, male right
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Branchiopoda
Subclass: Sarsostraca
Order: Anostraca
Suborder: Artemiina
Family: Artemiidae
Grochowski, 1895
Genus: Artemia
Leach, 1819
Species[1]

The ability of the Artemia to produce dormant eggs, known as cysts, has led to extensive use of Artemia in aquaculture. The cysts may be stored indefinitely and hatched on demand to provide a convenient form of live feed for larval fish and crustaceans.[4] Nauplii of the brine shrimp Artemia constitute the most widely used food item, and over 2,000 metric tons (2,200 short tons) of dry Artemia cysts are marketed worldwide annually.[5] In addition, the resilience of Artemia makes them ideal animals running biological toxicity assays and it has become a model organism used to test the toxicity of chemicals. Breeds of Artemia are sold as novelty gifts under the marketing name Sea-Monkeys.

Description edit

The brine shrimp Artemia comprises a group of seven to nine species very likely to have diverged from an ancestral form living in the Mediterranean area about 5.5 million years ago,[6] around the time of the Messinian salinity crisis.

The Laboratory of Aquaculture & Artemia Reference Center at Ghent University possesses the largest known Artemia cyst collection, a cyst bank containing over 1,700 Artemia population samples collected from different locations around the world.[7]

Artemia is a typical primitive arthropod with a segmented body to which is attached broad leaf-like appendages. The body usually consists of 19 segments, the first 11 of which have pairs of appendages, the next two which are often fused together carry the reproductive organs, and the last segments lead to the tail.[8] The total length is usually about 8–10 millimetres (0.31–0.39 in) for the adult male and 10–12 mm (0.39–0.47 in) for the female, but the width of both sexes, including the legs, is about 4 mm (0.16 in).

The body of Artemia is divided into head, thorax, and abdomen. The entire body is covered with a thin, flexible exoskeleton of chitin to which muscles are attached internally and which is shed periodically.[9] In female Artemia, a moult precedes every ovulation.

For brine shrimp, many functions, including swimming, digestion and reproduction are not controlled through the brain; instead, local nervous system ganglia may control some regulation or synchronisation of these functions.[9] Autotomy, the voluntary shedding or dropping of parts of the body for defence, is also controlled locally along the nervous system.[8] Artemia have two types of eyes. They have two widely separated compound eyes mounted on flexible stalks. These compound eyes are the main optical sense organ in adult brine shrimps. The median eye, or the naupliar eye, is situated anteriorly in the centre of the head and is the only functional optical sense organ in the nauplii, which is functional until the adult stage.[9]

Ecology and behavior edit

Brine shrimp can tolerate any levels of salinity from 25 to 250‰ (25–250 g/L),[10] with an optimal range of 60‰–100‰,[10] and occupy the ecological niche that can protect them from predators.[11] Physiologically, optimal levels of salinity are about 30–35‰, but due to predators at these salt levels, brine shrimp seldom occur in natural habitats at salinities of less than 60–80‰. Locomotion is achieved by the rhythmic beating of the appendages acting in pairs. Respiration occurs on the surface of the legs through fibrous, feather-like plates (lamellar epipodites).[8]

 
An Artemia cyst

Reproduction edit

Males differ from females by having the second antennae markedly enlarged, and modified into clasping organs used in mating.[12] Adult female brine shrimp ovulate approximately every 140 hours. In favourable conditions, the female brine shrimp can produce eggs that almost immediately hatch.[citation needed] While in extreme conditions, such as low oxygen level or salinity above 150‰, female brine shrimp produce eggs with a chorion coating which has a brown colour. These eggs, also known as cysts, are metabolically inactive and can remain in total stasis for two years while in dry oxygen-free conditions, even at temperatures below freezing. This characteristic is called cryptobiosis, meaning "hidden life". While in cryptobiosis, brine shrimp eggs can survive temperatures of liquid air (−190 °C or −310 °F) and a small percentage can survive above boiling temperature (105 °C or 221 °F) for up to two hours.[11] Once placed in briny (salt) water, the eggs hatch within a few hours. The nauplius larvae are less than 0.4 mm in length when they first hatch.

Parthenogenesis edit

 
The effects of central fusion and terminal fusion on heterozygosity

Parthenogenesis is a natural form of reproduction in which growth and development of embryos occur without fertilisation. Thelytoky is a particular form of parthenogenesis in which the development of a female individual occurs from an unfertilised egg. Automixis is a form of thelytoky, but there are different kinds of automixis. The kind of automixis relevant here is one in which two haploid products from the same meiosis combine to form a diploid zygote.

Diploid Artemia parthenogenetica reproduce by automictic parthenogenesis with central fusion (see diagram) and low but nonzero recombination.[13] Central fusion of two of the haploid products of meiosis (see diagram) tends to maintain heterozygosity in transmission of the genome from mother to offspring, and to minimise inbreeding depression. Low crossover recombination during meiosis likely restrains the transition from heterozygosity to homozygosity over successive generations.

Diet edit

In their first stage of development, Artemia do not feed but consume their own energy reserves stored in the cyst.[14] Wild brine shrimp eat microscopic planktonic algae. Cultured brine shrimp can also be fed particulate foods including yeast, wheat flour, soybean powder or egg yolk.[15]

Genetics, genomics and transcriptomics edit

Artemia comprises sexually reproducing, diploid species and several obligate parthenogenetic Artemia populations consisting of different clones and ploidies (2n->5n).[16] Several genetic maps have been published for Artemia.[17][18] The past years, different transcriptomic studies have been performed to elucidate biological responses in Artemia, such as its response to salt stress,[19][20] toxins,[21] infection[22] and diapause termination.[23] These studies also led to various fully assembled Artemia transcriptomes. Recently, the Artemia genome was assembled and annotated, revealing a genome containing an unequaled 58% of repeats, genes with unusually long introns and adaptations unique to the extremophilic nature of Artemia in high salt and low oxygen environments.[24] These adaptations include a unique energy-intensive endocytosis-based salt excretion strategy resembling salt excretion strategies of plants, as well as several survival strategies for extreme environments it has in common with the extremophilic tardigrade.[24]

Aquaculture edit

 
San Francisco Bay Salt Ponds

Fish farm owners search for a cost-effective, easy to use, and available food that is preferred by the fish. From cysts, brine shrimp nauplii can readily be used to feed fish and crustacean larvae just after a one-day incubation. Instar I (the nauplii that just hatched and with large yolk reserves in their body) and instar II nauplii (the nauplii after first moult and with functional digestive tracts) are more widely used in aquaculture, because they are easy for operation, rich in nutrients, and small, which makes them suitable for feeding fish and crustacean larvae live or after drying.

Toxicity test edit

Artemia found favor as a model organism for use in toxicological assays, despite the recognition that it is too robust an organism to be a sensitive indicator species.[25]

In pollution research Artemia, the brine shrimp, has had extensive use as a test organism and in some circumstances is an acceptable alternative to the toxicity testing of mammals in the laboratory.[26] The fact that millions of brine shrimp are so easily reared has been an important help in assessing the effects of a large number of environmental pollutants on the shrimps under well controlled experimental conditions.

Conservation edit

 
Artemia monica (male)

Overall, brine shrimp are abundant, but some populations and localized species do face threats, especially from habitat loss to introduced species. For example, A. franciscana of the Americas has been widely introduced to places outside its native range and is often able to outcompete local species, such as A. salina in the Mediterranean region.[27][28]

Among the highly localized species are A. urmiana from Lake Urmia in Iran. Once abundant, the species has drastically declined due to drought, leading to fears that it was almost extinct.[29] However, a second population of this species has recently been discovered in the Koyashskoye Salt Lake at the Crimean Peninsula.[30]

A. monica, the species commonly known as Mono Lake brine shrimp, can be found in Mono Lake, Mono County, California. In 1987, Dennis D. Murphy from Stanford University petitioned the United States Fish and Wildlife Service to add A. monica to the endangered species list under the Endangered Species Act (1973). The diversion of water by the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power resulted in rising salinity and concentration of sodium hydroxide in Mono Lake. Despite the presence of trillions of brine shrimp in the lake, the petition contended that the increase in pH would endanger them. The threat to the lake's water levels was addressed by a revision to California State Water Resources Control Board's policy, and the US Fish and Wildlife Service found on 7 September 1995 that the Mono Lake brine shrimp did not warrant listing.[31]

Space experiment edit

Scientists have taken the eggs of brine shrimp to outer space to test the impact of radiation on life. Brine shrimp cysts were flown on the U.S. Biosatellite 2, Apollo 16, and Apollo 17 missions, and on the Russian Bion-3 (Cosmos 782), Bion-5 (Cosmos 1129), Foton 10, and Foton 11 flights. Some of the Russian flights carried European Space Agency experiments.

On Apollo 16 and Apollo 17, the cysts traveled to the Moon and back. Cosmic rays that passed through an egg would be detected on the photographic film in its container. Some eggs were kept on Earth as experimental controls as part of the tests. Also, as the take-off in a spacecraft involves a lot of shaking and acceleration, one control group of egg cysts was accelerated to seven times the force of gravity and vibrated mechanically from side to side for several minutes so that they could experience the same violence of a rocket take-off.[32] About 400 eggs were in each experimental group. All the egg cysts from the experiment were then placed in salt water to hatch under optimum conditions. The results showed A. salina eggs are highly sensitive to cosmic radiation; 90% of the embryos induced to develop from hit eggs died at different developmental stages.[33]

References edit

  1. ^ Alireza Asem (2023). "Phylogenetic analysis of problematic Asian species of Artemia Leach, 1819 (Crustacea, Anostraca), with the descriptions of two new species". Journal of Crustacean Biology. 83: 1–25.
  2. ^ Alireza Asem; Amin Eimanifar (2016). (PDF). International Journal of Aquatic Science. 7: 1–5. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-04-01. Retrieved 2016-11-24.
  3. ^ Alireza Asem (2008). (PDF). Journal of Biological Research-Thessaloniki. 9: 113–114. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-12-01. Retrieved 2013-05-17.
  4. ^ a b Martin Daintith (1996). Rotifers and Artemia for Marine Aquaculture: a Training Guide. University of Tasmania. OCLC 222006176.
  5. ^ "Introduction, biology and ecology of Artemia". Retrieved 15 October 2022.
  6. ^ F. A. Abreu-Grobois (1987). "A review of the genetics of Artemia". In P. Sorgerloo; D. A. Bengtson; W. Decleir; E. Jasper (eds.). Artemia Research and its Applications. Proceedings of the Second International Symposium on the Brine Shrimp Artemia, organised under the patronage of His Majesty the King of Belgium. Vol. 1. Wetteren, Belgium: Universa Press. pp. 61–99. OCLC 17978639.
  7. ^ De Vos, Stephanie (2014). Genomic tools and sex determination in the extremophile brine shrimp Artemia franciscana. Ghent: UGent. p. 3. ISBN 978-90-5989-717-5.
  8. ^ a b c Cleveland P. Hickman (1967). Biology of Invertebrates. St. Louis, Missouri: C. V. Mosby. OL 19205202M.
  9. ^ a b c R. J. Criel & H. T. Macrae (2002). "Artemia morphology and structure". In T. J. Abatzopoulos; J. A. Breardmore; J. S. Clegg & P. Sorgerloos (eds.). Artemia: Basic and Applied Biology. Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 1–33. ISBN 978-1-4020-0746-0.
  10. ^ a b John K. Warren (2006). "Halotolerant life in feast or famine (a source of hydrocarbons and a fixer of metals)". Evaporites: Sediments, Resources and Hydrocarbons. Birkhäuser. pp. 617–704. ISBN 978-3-540-26011-0.
  11. ^ a b Whitey Hitchcock. . Clinton High School Science. Archived from the original on September 3, 2010. Retrieved March 13, 2010.
  12. ^ Greta E. Tyson & Michael L. Sullivan (1980). "Scanning electron microscopy of the frontal knobs of the male brine shrimp". Transactions of the American Microscopical Society. 99 (2): 167–172. doi:10.2307/3225702. JSTOR 3225702.
  13. ^ O. Nougué; N. O. Rode; R. Jabbour-Zahab; A. Ségard; L.-M. Chevin; C. R. Haag; T. Lenormand (2015). "Automixis in Artemia: solving a century-old controversy". Journal of Evolutionary Biology. 28 (12): 2337–48. doi:10.1111/jeb.12757. PMID 26356354.
  14. ^ P. Sorgeloos; P. Dhert & P. Candreva (2001). "Use of the brine shrimp, Artemia spp., in marine fish larviculture" (PDF). Aquaculture. 200 (1–2): 147–159. doi:10.1016/s0044-8486(01)00698-6.
  15. ^ Kai Schumann (August 10, 1997). . Portland State University. Archived from the original on August 14, 2007. Retrieved March 13, 2010.
  16. ^ Maniatsi, Stefania; Baxevanis, Athanasios D.; Kappas, Ilias; Deligiannidis, Panagiotis; Triantafyllidis, Alexander; Papakostas, Spiros; Bougiouklis, Dimitrios; Abatzopoulos, Theodore J. (2011-02-01). "Is polyploidy a persevering accident or an adaptive evolutionary pattern? The case of the brine shrimp Artemia". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 58 (2): 353–364. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2010.11.029. PMID 21145977.
  17. ^ Vos, Stephanie De; Bossier, Peter; Stappen, Gilbert Van; Vercauteren, Ilse; Sorgeloos, Patrick; Vuylsteke, Marnik (2013-03-04). "A first AFLP-Based Genetic Linkage Map for Brine Shrimp Artemia franciscana and Its Application in Mapping the Sex Locus". PLOS ONE. 8 (3): e57585. Bibcode:2013PLoSO...857585D. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0057585. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 3587612. PMID 23469207.
  18. ^ Han, Xuekai; Ren, Yizhuo; Ouyang, Xuemei; Zhang, Bo; Sui, Liying (2021-07-15). "Construction of a high-density genetic linkage map and QTL mapping for sex and growth traits in Artemia franciscana". Aquaculture. 540: 736692. doi:10.1016/j.aquaculture.2021.736692. ISSN 0044-8486. S2CID 233663524.
  19. ^ De Vos, S.; Van Stappen, G.; Sorgeloos, P.; Vuylsteke, M.; Rombauts, S.; Bossier, P. (2019-02-01). "Identification of salt stress response genes using the Artemia transcriptome". Aquaculture. 500: 305–314. doi:10.1016/j.aquaculture.2018.09.067. ISSN 0044-8486. S2CID 92842322.
  20. ^ Lee, Junmo; Park, Jong Soo (2020-10-13). "Tolerance at the genetic level of the brine shrimp Artemia salina to a wide range of salinity". www.researchsquare.com. doi:10.21203/rs.3.rs-91049/v1. S2CID 234621039. Retrieved 2021-09-02.
  21. ^ Yi, Xianliang; Zhang, Keke; Liu, Renyan; Giesy, John P.; Li, Zhaochuan; Li, Wentao; Zhan, Jingjing; Liu, Lifen; Gong, Yufeng (2020-01-01). "Transcriptomic responses of Artemia salina exposed to an environmentally relevant dose of Alexandrium minutum cells or Gonyautoxin2/3". Chemosphere. 238: 124661. Bibcode:2020Chmsp.238l4661Y. doi:10.1016/j.chemosphere.2019.124661. ISSN 0045-6535. PMID 31472350. S2CID 201700530.
  22. ^ Zhang, Yulong; Wang, Di; Zhang, Zao; Wang, Zhangping; Zhang, Daochuan; Yin, Hong (2018-10-01). "Transcriptome analysis of Artemia sinica in response to Micrococcus lysodeikticus infection". Fish & Shellfish Immunology. 81: 92–98. doi:10.1016/j.fsi.2018.06.033. ISSN 1050-4648. PMID 30006042. S2CID 51624497.
  23. ^ Chen, Bonien; Chu, Tah-Wei; Chiu, Kuohsun; Hong, Ming-Chang; Wu, Tsung-Meng; Ma, Jui-Wen; Liang, Chih-Ming; Wang, Wei-Kuang (2021-02-19). "Transcriptomic analysis elucidates the molecular processes associated with hydrogen peroxide-induced diapause termination in Artemia-encysted embryos". PLOS ONE. 16 (2): e0247160. Bibcode:2021PLoSO..1647160C. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0247160. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 7894940. PMID 33606769.
  24. ^ a b De Vos, Stephanie; Rombauts, Stephane; Coussement, Louis; Dermauw, Wannes; Vuylsteke, Marnik; Sorgeloos, Patrick; Clegg, James S.; Nambu, Ziro; Van Nieuwerburgh, Filip; Norouzitallab, Parisa; Van Leeuwen, Thomas (2021-08-31). "The genome of the extremophile Artemia provides insight into strategies to cope with extreme environments". BMC Genomics. 22 (1): 635. doi:10.1186/s12864-021-07937-z. ISSN 1471-2164. PMC 8406910. PMID 34465293.
  25. ^ Micharl Dockey & Stephen Tonkins. (PDF). British Ecological Society. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-07-08.
  26. ^ L. Lewan; M. Anderrson & P. Morales-Gomez (1992). "The use of Artemia salina in toxicity testing". Alternatives to Laboratory Animals. 20 (2): 297–301. doi:10.1177/026119299202000222. S2CID 88834451.
  27. ^ Muñoz J; Gómez A; Green AJ; Figuerola J; Amat F; Rico C (2008). "Phylogeography and local endemism of the native Mediterranean brine shrimp Artemia salina (Branchiopoda: Anostraca)". Mol. Ecol. 17 (13): 3160–3177. doi:10.1111/j.1365-294X.2008.03818.x. hdl:10261/37169. PMID 18510585. S2CID 23565318.
  28. ^ Hachem Ben Naceur; Amel Ben Rejeb Jenhani; Mohamed Salah Romdhane (2009). "New distribution record of the brine shrimp Artemia (Crustacea, Branchiopoda, Anostraca) in Tunisia". Check List. 5 (2): 281–288. doi:10.15560/5.2.281. ISSN 1809-127X.
  29. ^ "Lake Urumia's Artemia Face Extinction". Financial Tribune. 28 December 2014. Retrieved 29 January 2018.
  30. ^ Eimanifar A; Asem A; Djamali M; Wink M (2016). (PDF). Zootaxa. 4097 (2): 294–300. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.4097.2.12. PMID 27394547. S2CID 25998873. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-02-10.
  31. ^ "Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; 12-Month Finding for a Petition to List the Mono Lake Brine Shrimp as Endangered". Federal Register. 60 (173): 46571–46572. 1995.[permanent dead link]
  32. ^ H. Planel; Y. Gaubin; R. Kaiser; B. Pianezzi (1980). "The effects of cosmic rays on Artemia egg cysts". Laboratoire Médicale. Report for National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
  33. ^ H. Bücker & G. Horneck (1975). "The biological effectiveness of HZE-particles of cosmic radiation studied in the Apollo 16 and 17 Biostack experiments". Acta Astronautica. 2 (3–4): 247–264. Bibcode:1975AcAau...2..247B. doi:10.1016/0094-5765(75)90095-8. PMID 11887916.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Artemia at Wikimedia Commons
  • . Systema Naturae 2000. The Taxonomicon. Archived from the original on March 13, 2010. Retrieved March 13, 2010.
  • Richard Fox (February 13, 2004). . Archived from the original on April 23, 2006. Retrieved March 13, 2010.
  • "Brine Shrimp and Ecology of Great Salt Lake". United States Geological Survey. May 15, 2009. Retrieved March 13, 2010.

brine, shrimp, artemia, genus, aquatic, crustaceans, also, known, brine, shrimp, only, genus, family, artemiidae, first, historical, record, existence, artemia, dates, back, first, half, 10th, century, from, lake, urmia, iran, with, example, called, iranian, g. Artemia is a genus of aquatic crustaceans also known as brine shrimp It is the only genus in the family Artemiidae The first historical record of the existence of Artemia dates back to the first half of the 10th century AD from Lake Urmia Iran with an example called by an Iranian geographer an aquatic dog 2 although the first unambiguous record is the report and drawings made by Schlosser in 1757 of animals from Lymington England 3 Artemia populations are found worldwide typically in inland saltwater lakes but occasionally in oceans Artemia are able to avoid cohabiting with most types of predators such as fish by their ability to live in waters of very high salinity up to 25 4 Brine shrimpArtemia salina mating pair female left male rightScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ArthropodaClass BranchiopodaSubclass SarsostracaOrder AnostracaSuborder ArtemiinaFamily ArtemiidaeGrochowski 1895Genus ArtemiaLeach 1819Species 1 Artemia franciscana Artemia monica Artemia persimilis Artemia salina Artemia sinica Artemia tibetiana Artemia urmiana Artemia amati Artemia sorgeloosi Parthenogenetic populations also called Artemia parthenogenetica disputed The ability of the Artemia to produce dormant eggs known as cysts has led to extensive use of Artemia in aquaculture The cysts may be stored indefinitely and hatched on demand to provide a convenient form of live feed for larval fish and crustaceans 4 Nauplii of the brine shrimp Artemia constitute the most widely used food item and over 2 000 metric tons 2 200 short tons of dry Artemia cysts are marketed worldwide annually 5 In addition the resilience of Artemia makes them ideal animals running biological toxicity assays and it has become a model organism used to test the toxicity of chemicals Breeds of Artemia are sold as novelty gifts under the marketing name Sea Monkeys Contents 1 Description 2 Ecology and behavior 2 1 Reproduction 2 2 Parthenogenesis 2 3 Diet 3 Genetics genomics and transcriptomics 4 Aquaculture 5 Toxicity test 6 Conservation 7 Space experiment 8 References 9 External linksDescription editThe brine shrimp Artemia comprises a group of seven to nine species very likely to have diverged from an ancestral form living in the Mediterranean area about 5 5 million years ago 6 around the time of the Messinian salinity crisis The Laboratory of Aquaculture amp Artemia Reference Center at Ghent University possesses the largest known Artemia cyst collection a cyst bank containing over 1 700 Artemia population samples collected from different locations around the world 7 Artemia is a typical primitive arthropod with a segmented body to which is attached broad leaf like appendages The body usually consists of 19 segments the first 11 of which have pairs of appendages the next two which are often fused together carry the reproductive organs and the last segments lead to the tail 8 The total length is usually about 8 10 millimetres 0 31 0 39 in for the adult male and 10 12 mm 0 39 0 47 in for the female but the width of both sexes including the legs is about 4 mm 0 16 in The body of Artemia is divided into head thorax and abdomen The entire body is covered with a thin flexible exoskeleton of chitin to which muscles are attached internally and which is shed periodically 9 In female Artemia a moult precedes every ovulation For brine shrimp many functions including swimming digestion and reproduction are not controlled through the brain instead local nervous system ganglia may control some regulation or synchronisation of these functions 9 Autotomy the voluntary shedding or dropping of parts of the body for defence is also controlled locally along the nervous system 8 Artemia have two types of eyes They have two widely separated compound eyes mounted on flexible stalks These compound eyes are the main optical sense organ in adult brine shrimps The median eye or the naupliar eye is situated anteriorly in the centre of the head and is the only functional optical sense organ in the nauplii which is functional until the adult stage 9 Ecology and behavior editBrine shrimp can tolerate any levels of salinity from 25 to 250 25 250 g L 10 with an optimal range of 60 100 10 and occupy the ecological niche that can protect them from predators 11 Physiologically optimal levels of salinity are about 30 35 but due to predators at these salt levels brine shrimp seldom occur in natural habitats at salinities of less than 60 80 Locomotion is achieved by the rhythmic beating of the appendages acting in pairs Respiration occurs on the surface of the legs through fibrous feather like plates lamellar epipodites 8 nbsp An Artemia cystReproduction edit Males differ from females by having the second antennae markedly enlarged and modified into clasping organs used in mating 12 Adult female brine shrimp ovulate approximately every 140 hours In favourable conditions the female brine shrimp can produce eggs that almost immediately hatch citation needed While in extreme conditions such as low oxygen level or salinity above 150 female brine shrimp produce eggs with a chorion coating which has a brown colour These eggs also known as cysts are metabolically inactive and can remain in total stasis for two years while in dry oxygen free conditions even at temperatures below freezing This characteristic is called cryptobiosis meaning hidden life While in cryptobiosis brine shrimp eggs can survive temperatures of liquid air 190 C or 310 F and a small percentage can survive above boiling temperature 105 C or 221 F for up to two hours 11 Once placed in briny salt water the eggs hatch within a few hours The nauplius larvae are less than 0 4 mm in length when they first hatch Parthenogenesis edit nbsp The effects of central fusion and terminal fusion on heterozygosityParthenogenesis is a natural form of reproduction in which growth and development of embryos occur without fertilisation Thelytoky is a particular form of parthenogenesis in which the development of a female individual occurs from an unfertilised egg Automixis is a form of thelytoky but there are different kinds of automixis The kind of automixis relevant here is one in which two haploid products from the same meiosis combine to form a diploid zygote Diploid Artemia parthenogenetica reproduce by automictic parthenogenesis with central fusion see diagram and low but nonzero recombination 13 Central fusion of two of the haploid products of meiosis see diagram tends to maintain heterozygosity in transmission of the genome from mother to offspring and to minimise inbreeding depression Low crossover recombination during meiosis likely restrains the transition from heterozygosity to homozygosity over successive generations Diet edit In their first stage of development Artemia do not feed but consume their own energy reserves stored in the cyst 14 Wild brine shrimp eat microscopic planktonic algae Cultured brine shrimp can also be fed particulate foods including yeast wheat flour soybean powder or egg yolk 15 Genetics genomics and transcriptomics editArtemia comprises sexually reproducing diploid species and several obligate parthenogenetic Artemia populations consisting of different clones and ploidies 2n gt 5n 16 Several genetic maps have been published for Artemia 17 18 The past years different transcriptomic studies have been performed to elucidate biological responses in Artemia such as its response to salt stress 19 20 toxins 21 infection 22 and diapause termination 23 These studies also led to various fully assembled Artemia transcriptomes Recently the Artemia genome was assembled and annotated revealing a genome containing an unequaled 58 of repeats genes with unusually long introns and adaptations unique to the extremophilic nature of Artemia in high salt and low oxygen environments 24 These adaptations include a unique energy intensive endocytosis based salt excretion strategy resembling salt excretion strategies of plants as well as several survival strategies for extreme environments it has in common with the extremophilic tardigrade 24 Aquaculture edit nbsp San Francisco Bay Salt PondsMain article Aquaculture of brine shrimp Fish farm owners search for a cost effective easy to use and available food that is preferred by the fish From cysts brine shrimp nauplii can readily be used to feed fish and crustacean larvae just after a one day incubation Instar I the nauplii that just hatched and with large yolk reserves in their body and instar II nauplii the nauplii after first moult and with functional digestive tracts are more widely used in aquaculture because they are easy for operation rich in nutrients and small which makes them suitable for feeding fish and crustacean larvae live or after drying Toxicity test editArtemia found favor as a model organism for use in toxicological assays despite the recognition that it is too robust an organism to be a sensitive indicator species 25 In pollution research Artemia the brine shrimp has had extensive use as a test organism and in some circumstances is an acceptable alternative to the toxicity testing of mammals in the laboratory 26 The fact that millions of brine shrimp are so easily reared has been an important help in assessing the effects of a large number of environmental pollutants on the shrimps under well controlled experimental conditions Conservation edit nbsp Artemia monica male Overall brine shrimp are abundant but some populations and localized species do face threats especially from habitat loss to introduced species For example A franciscana of the Americas has been widely introduced to places outside its native range and is often able to outcompete local species such as A salina in the Mediterranean region 27 28 Among the highly localized species are A urmiana from Lake Urmia in Iran Once abundant the species has drastically declined due to drought leading to fears that it was almost extinct 29 However a second population of this species has recently been discovered in the Koyashskoye Salt Lake at the Crimean Peninsula 30 A monica the species commonly known as Mono Lake brine shrimp can be found in Mono Lake Mono County California In 1987 Dennis D Murphy from Stanford University petitioned the United States Fish and Wildlife Service to add A monica to the endangered species list under the Endangered Species Act 1973 The diversion of water by the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power resulted in rising salinity and concentration of sodium hydroxide in Mono Lake Despite the presence of trillions of brine shrimp in the lake the petition contended that the increase in pH would endanger them The threat to the lake s water levels was addressed by a revision to California State Water Resources Control Board s policy and the US Fish and Wildlife Service found on 7 September 1995 that the Mono Lake brine shrimp did not warrant listing 31 Space experiment editScientists have taken the eggs of brine shrimp to outer space to test the impact of radiation on life Brine shrimp cysts were flown on the U S Biosatellite 2 Apollo 16 and Apollo 17 missions and on the Russian Bion 3 Cosmos 782 Bion 5 Cosmos 1129 Foton 10 and Foton 11 flights Some of the Russian flights carried European Space Agency experiments On Apollo 16 and Apollo 17 the cysts traveled to the Moon and back Cosmic rays that passed through an egg would be detected on the photographic film in its container Some eggs were kept on Earth as experimental controls as part of the tests Also as the take off in a spacecraft involves a lot of shaking and acceleration one control group of egg cysts was accelerated to seven times the force of gravity and vibrated mechanically from side to side for several minutes so that they could experience the same violence of a rocket take off 32 About 400 eggs were in each experimental group All the egg cysts from the experiment were then placed in salt water to hatch under optimum conditions The results showed A salina eggs are highly sensitive to cosmic radiation 90 of the embryos induced to develop from hit eggs died at different developmental stages 33 References edit Alireza Asem 2023 Phylogenetic analysis of problematic Asian species of Artemia Leach 1819 Crustacea Anostraca with the descriptions of two new species Journal of Crustacean Biology 83 1 25 Alireza Asem Amin Eimanifar 2016 Updating historical record on brine shrimp Artemia Crustacea Anostraca from Urmia Lake Iran in the first half of the 10th century AD PDF International Journal of Aquatic Science 7 1 5 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 04 01 Retrieved 2016 11 24 Alireza Asem 2008 Historical record on brine shrimp Artemia more than one thousand years ago from Urmia Lake Iran PDF Journal of Biological Research Thessaloniki 9 113 114 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 12 01 Retrieved 2013 05 17 a b Martin Daintith 1996 Rotifers andArtemiafor Marine Aquaculture a Training Guide University of Tasmania OCLC 222006176 Introduction biology and ecology of Artemia Retrieved 15 October 2022 F A Abreu Grobois 1987 A review of the genetics of Artemia In P Sorgerloo D A Bengtson W Decleir E Jasper eds ArtemiaResearch and its Applications Proceedings of the Second International Symposium on the Brine ShrimpArtemia organised under the patronage of His Majesty the King of Belgium Vol 1 Wetteren Belgium Universa Press pp 61 99 OCLC 17978639 De Vos Stephanie 2014 Genomic tools and sex determination in the extremophile brine shrimp Artemia franciscana Ghent UGent p 3 ISBN 978 90 5989 717 5 a b c Cleveland P Hickman 1967 Biology of Invertebrates St Louis Missouri C V Mosby OL 19205202M a b c R J Criel amp H T Macrae 2002 Artemia morphology and structure In T J Abatzopoulos J A Breardmore J S Clegg amp P Sorgerloos eds Artemia Basic and Applied Biology Kluwer Academic Publishers pp 1 33 ISBN 978 1 4020 0746 0 a b John K Warren 2006 Halotolerant life in feast or famine a source of hydrocarbons and a fixer of metals Evaporites Sediments Resources and Hydrocarbons Birkhauser pp 617 704 ISBN 978 3 540 26011 0 a b Whitey Hitchcock Brine shrimp Clinton High School Science Archived from the original on September 3 2010 Retrieved March 13 2010 Greta E Tyson amp Michael L Sullivan 1980 Scanning electron microscopy of the frontal knobs of the male brine shrimp Transactions of the American Microscopical Society 99 2 167 172 doi 10 2307 3225702 JSTOR 3225702 O Nougue N O Rode R Jabbour Zahab A Segard L M Chevin C R Haag T Lenormand 2015 Automixis in Artemia solving a century old controversy Journal of Evolutionary Biology 28 12 2337 48 doi 10 1111 jeb 12757 PMID 26356354 P Sorgeloos P Dhert amp P Candreva 2001 Use of the brine shrimp Artemia spp in marine fish larviculture PDF Aquaculture 200 1 2 147 159 doi 10 1016 s0044 8486 01 00698 6 Kai Schumann August 10 1997 Artemia Brine Shrimp FAQ 1 1 Portland State University Archived from the original on August 14 2007 Retrieved March 13 2010 Maniatsi Stefania Baxevanis Athanasios D Kappas Ilias Deligiannidis Panagiotis Triantafyllidis Alexander Papakostas Spiros Bougiouklis Dimitrios Abatzopoulos Theodore J 2011 02 01 Is polyploidy a persevering accident or an adaptive evolutionary pattern The case of the brine shrimp Artemia Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 58 2 353 364 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2010 11 029 PMID 21145977 Vos Stephanie De Bossier Peter Stappen Gilbert Van Vercauteren Ilse Sorgeloos Patrick Vuylsteke Marnik 2013 03 04 A first AFLP Based Genetic Linkage Map for Brine Shrimp Artemia franciscana and Its Application in Mapping the Sex Locus PLOS ONE 8 3 e57585 Bibcode 2013PLoSO 857585D doi 10 1371 journal pone 0057585 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 3587612 PMID 23469207 Han Xuekai Ren Yizhuo Ouyang Xuemei Zhang Bo Sui Liying 2021 07 15 Construction of a high density genetic linkage map and QTL mapping for sex and growth traits in Artemia franciscana Aquaculture 540 736692 doi 10 1016 j aquaculture 2021 736692 ISSN 0044 8486 S2CID 233663524 De Vos S Van Stappen G Sorgeloos P Vuylsteke M Rombauts S Bossier P 2019 02 01 Identification of salt stress response genes using the Artemia transcriptome Aquaculture 500 305 314 doi 10 1016 j aquaculture 2018 09 067 ISSN 0044 8486 S2CID 92842322 Lee Junmo Park Jong Soo 2020 10 13 Tolerance at the genetic level of the brine shrimp Artemia salina to a wide range of salinity www researchsquare com doi 10 21203 rs 3 rs 91049 v1 S2CID 234621039 Retrieved 2021 09 02 Yi Xianliang Zhang Keke Liu Renyan Giesy John P Li Zhaochuan Li Wentao Zhan Jingjing Liu Lifen Gong Yufeng 2020 01 01 Transcriptomic responses of Artemia salina exposed to an environmentally relevant dose of Alexandrium minutum cells or Gonyautoxin2 3 Chemosphere 238 124661 Bibcode 2020Chmsp 238l4661Y doi 10 1016 j chemosphere 2019 124661 ISSN 0045 6535 PMID 31472350 S2CID 201700530 Zhang Yulong Wang Di Zhang Zao Wang Zhangping Zhang Daochuan Yin Hong 2018 10 01 Transcriptome analysis of Artemia sinica in response to Micrococcus lysodeikticus infection Fish amp Shellfish Immunology 81 92 98 doi 10 1016 j fsi 2018 06 033 ISSN 1050 4648 PMID 30006042 S2CID 51624497 Chen Bonien Chu Tah Wei Chiu Kuohsun Hong Ming Chang Wu Tsung Meng Ma Jui Wen Liang Chih Ming Wang Wei Kuang 2021 02 19 Transcriptomic analysis elucidates the molecular processes associated with hydrogen peroxide induced diapause termination in Artemia encysted embryos PLOS ONE 16 2 e0247160 Bibcode 2021PLoSO 1647160C doi 10 1371 journal pone 0247160 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 7894940 PMID 33606769 a b De Vos Stephanie Rombauts Stephane Coussement Louis Dermauw Wannes Vuylsteke Marnik Sorgeloos Patrick Clegg James S Nambu Ziro Van Nieuwerburgh Filip Norouzitallab Parisa Van Leeuwen Thomas 2021 08 31 The genome of the extremophile Artemia provides insight into strategies to cope with extreme environments BMC Genomics 22 1 635 doi 10 1186 s12864 021 07937 z ISSN 1471 2164 PMC 8406910 PMID 34465293 Micharl Dockey amp Stephen Tonkins Brine shrimp ecology PDF British Ecological Society Archived from the original PDF on 2009 07 08 L Lewan M Anderrson amp P Morales Gomez 1992 The use of Artemia salina in toxicity testing Alternatives to Laboratory Animals 20 2 297 301 doi 10 1177 026119299202000222 S2CID 88834451 Munoz J Gomez A Green AJ Figuerola J Amat F Rico C 2008 Phylogeography and local endemism of the native Mediterranean brine shrimp Artemia salina Branchiopoda Anostraca Mol Ecol 17 13 3160 3177 doi 10 1111 j 1365 294X 2008 03818 x hdl 10261 37169 PMID 18510585 S2CID 23565318 Hachem Ben Naceur Amel Ben Rejeb Jenhani Mohamed Salah Romdhane 2009 New distribution record of the brine shrimp Artemia Crustacea Branchiopoda Anostraca in Tunisia Check List 5 2 281 288 doi 10 15560 5 2 281 ISSN 1809 127X Lake Urumia s Artemia Face Extinction Financial Tribune 28 December 2014 Retrieved 29 January 2018 Eimanifar A Asem A Djamali M Wink M 2016 A note on the biogeographical origin of the brine shrimp Artemia urmiana Gunther 1899 from Urmia Lake Iran PDF Zootaxa 4097 2 294 300 doi 10 11646 zootaxa 4097 2 12 PMID 27394547 S2CID 25998873 Archived from the original PDF on 2020 02 10 Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants 12 Month Finding for a Petition to List the Mono Lake Brine Shrimp as Endangered Federal Register 60 173 46571 46572 1995 permanent dead link H Planel Y Gaubin R Kaiser B Pianezzi 1980 The effects of cosmic rays on Artemia egg cysts Laboratoire Medicale Report for National Aeronautics and Space Administration H Bucker amp G Horneck 1975 The biological effectiveness of HZE particles of cosmic radiation studied in the Apollo 16 and 17 Biostack experiments Acta Astronautica 2 3 4 247 264 Bibcode 1975AcAau 2 247B doi 10 1016 0094 5765 75 90095 8 PMID 11887916 External links edit nbsp Media related to Artemia at Wikimedia Commons Genus Artemia Systema Naturae 2000 The Taxonomicon Archived from the original on March 13 2010 Retrieved March 13 2010 Richard Fox February 13 2004 Artemia Laboratory Exercise Artemia franciscana Archived from the original on April 23 2006 Retrieved March 13 2010 Brine Shrimp and Ecology of Great Salt Lake United States Geological Survey May 15 2009 Retrieved March 13 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Brine shrimp amp oldid 1189906041, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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