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Neural factors influence the degeneration of muscle fibers in the chelae of snapping shrimps
Authors:R. E. Young  A. Wong  J. Pearce  C. K. Govind
Affiliation:1. Department of Physiology, University of the West Indies, Mona, 7, Kingston, Jamaica W.I.
2. Division of Life Sciences, Scarborough Campus, University of Toronto, 1265 Military Trail, M1C 1A4, Scarborough, Ontario, Canada
Abstract:The asymmetric pincer and snapper claws in the snapping shrimp differ in external morphology and musculature. The snapper is a massive claw used for displays and defense; the pincer is small and slender, used for feeding and burrowing. The snapper has only slow muscle fibers; the pincer has both slow and fast. Removal or denervation of the snapper claw induces transformation of the contralateral pincer to a snapper type of claw at the subsequent molt. A removed claw regenerates as a pincer type, as long as the innervation of the remaining claw is intact. Fast muscle fibers, found exclusively in the pincer claw, normally degenerate completely within 10 d after the moult, which transforms the pincer to a snapper. Morphological transformation of the pincer following removal of the snapper claw can occur even if the pincer claw is denervated. Denervation of the pincer, however, delays degeneration of the fast fibers, increasing the estimated half-time for muscle degeneration, from 4.4±0.2 to 19.5±0.8. d after the transforming moult. Neural influences there-fore are involved both in the determination of the morphology of the claw and in the induction of degenerative changes during the remodeling of an existing claw.
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