New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research abstracts
Epidermal pigmentation and liver coloration in the southern hemisphere lamprey, Geotria austral Is Gray
P. R. TODD
Fisheries Research Division Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries Private Bag Christchurch, New Zealand
R. D. WILSON
Chemistry Division
Department of Scientific and Industrial Research
Private Bag
Petone, New Zealand
Abstract
During metamorphosis from ammocoete to macrophthalmia in the southern hemisphere lamprey,
Geotria australis Gray, 2 blue-green dorso-lateral stripes develop along the length of the body. These stripes are retained during the marine parasitic feeding stage and are conspicuous when the adults enter fresh water at the beginning of the spawning migration. They disappear as the upstream migration progresses. The blue-green coloration is present in the epidermal mucous layer and results from the deposition of biliverdin, a bile pigment produced as a breakdown product of haemoglobin. Liver colour changes during the upstream spawning migration. At the beginning of the migration liver colour is predominantly brown or brick-red, and livers contain the bile pigment bilirubin. Lampreys collected 50 km from the sea had predominantly green livers owing to the presence of the bile pigment biliverdin, and gonad development had not increased from that observed at the beginning of the spawning migration. Pouched males contained dark green livers with biliverdin as the predominant pigment.
Keywords lampreys; Geotria australis; Geot-riidae; skin; pigments; liver; colour; bile; migrations; spawning migrations; physiology.
New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research, 1983, Vol. 17 : 21-26 1983Received 14 December 1981; accepted 24 September 1982
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (491K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
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