Vol. 59, 2020
(update: 2020.10.21; 11.30)
Seasonality and Longevity of
the Functional Chloroplasts Retained by the Sacoglossan Sea Slug Plakobranchus ocellatus van
Hasselt, 1824 Inhabiting A Subtropical Back Reef Off Okinawa-jima
Island, Japan
Shu
Chihara, Takashi Nakamura, and Euichi Hirose*
doi:10.6620/ZS.2020.59-65
Faculty
of Science, University of the Ryukyus, Nishihara, Okinawa 903-0213,
Japan. *Correspondence: E-mail: euichi@sci.u-ryukyu.ac.jp (Hirose)
E-mail: ringoamemh@icloud.com (Chihara); takasuke@sci.u-ryukyu.ac.jp
(Nakamura)
Received 18 July 2020 / Accepted 12
October 2020
Communicated by Yoko Nozawa
Plakobranchus ocellatus is a
sacoglossan sea slug that feeds on multiple algal species and retains
chloroplasts as kleptoplasts for several months. The seasonal
differences in the photosynthetic properties of kleptoplasts were
examined in sacoglossans collected from a subtropical back reef off of
Okinawa-jima (26°21'55"N 127°44'10"E) in 2017–2018. The effective
quantum yield of photosystem II in kleptoplasts indicated that stronger
ambient light causes more stress in kleptoplasts. The maximum quantum
yields (QY) at 20°C, 30°C, and
40°C indicated that kleptoplasts were more functional in photosynthesis
in winter than in spring or summer, whereas kleptoplasts may have the
highest tolerance to high temperatures in summer. In the
long-starvation experiment (LSE), the relative ratio of body weight (relW) linearly decreased and the
sacoglossans died within 2 months in the total dark condition, whereas
in the LSE with illumination, the animals survived up to 5 months. The
time course for the decrease in the relative ratio of the QY (relQY) in the LSE indicated that the
photosynthetic function was almost normal for 2
months, regardless of the presence or absence of illumination, after
which time relQY gradually
decreased to zero. In the field, P.
ocellatus continuously took up new kleptoplasts that have
suitable properties of photosynthetic ability for each season. In a
subtropical environment, in which water temperatures vary from below
20°C to above 30°C, seasonal changes could cause a temporary shortage
of algal food and affect the photosynthetic activity of P. ocellatus kleptoplast. Our
results, however, indicated the kleptoplasts of P. ocellatus functioned normally
for several months and maintained the presence of this sacoglossan in a
subtropical environment throughout the year.
Key words: Kleptoplasty,
Long-starvation experiment, Long-term retention,
Pulse-amplitude-modulated fluorescence, Total darkness.
Citation: Chihara S, Nakamura T, Hirose E.
2020. Seasonality and longevity of the functional chloroplasts retained
by the sacoglossan sea slug Plakobranchus
ocellatus van Hasselt, 1824 inhabiting a subtropical back reef
off Okinawa-jima Island, Japan. Zool Stud 59:65.
doi:10.6620/ZS.2020.59-65.

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