This is from an experiment that is being run by Sandra Brook from
Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institution.
About the incubators...
One of the nice parts of working on deep-sea hydrothermal vent cruises is
the diversity of research that is conducted on board. In addition to the
research looking at the adult biological community, there are two people
on board who are focusing on the developmental biology of Riftia
pachyptila. Allison Green from the University of Southern California and
Sandra Brook from Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institution spend their days
working on tubeworm young that are anywhere from a few minutes old to
thirty days old.
Adult Riftia that have reached sexual maturity are collected from
different sites in the vent field and brought up the surface. Allison and
Sandra dissect the worms to remove eggs and sperm from the tubeworms. The
eggs and sperm are mixed together and allowed to sit long enough to just
begin development into embryos.
From there, two things happen to the new embryos. Allison puts the embryos
into small, pressurized containers that are kept at 2-degrees Celsius in
the lab. At set intervals she removes the embryos to check on their
development. Sandra puts the embryos into tubes that are sent down to the
vent field with the sub. The tubes are floating about 6 inches off the
bottom in an area a few meters away from the active vents. Every two or
three days, two of the tubes are retrieved and returned to the surface to
check on the progress in the development of the embryos.
As new embryos are pulled up from the bottom or removed from the shipboard
incubators, even the geologists and chemists can be coaxed to look through
the microscope to see how they are developing. I'd say that the consensus
on the ship is that growing Riftia is exciting.
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