Results and
Discussion:
At
second cleavage, all the eggs that were radiated with UV for
one minute looked normal. At second cleavage,
most of
the eggs that were radiated with UV for two minutes looked
normal. A couple of eggs looked like Figure 2.
They
had a
cytoplasmic blip. At second cleavage, majority of the eggs
that were radiated with UV for five minutes
looked
normal.
A handful of eggs looked the same as Figure 2. The UV did
not seem to damage the embryos immediately; most
of the
second cleavages were normal for all eggs in all the
experimental exposure times.
In
the second part of the experiment, the embryos were observed
after gastrulation. At that point the archenteron
is
visible, secondary mesenchyme cells are visible, and cells
organized themselves into spicules. All the control
eggs
were
hatched from the fertilization envelope and were ciliated as
in Figure 3. All the embryos that were radiated with
UV
for one
minute had blastula and cilia and primary mesenchyme cells
but no vegetal plate or vagination was observed.
This is
seen in Figure 4. All the embryos that were radiated with UV
for two minutes looked the same as Figure 4
except
one
normal embryo was found. All the cells that were radiated
with UV for five minutes looked the same as Figure 4.
All
the
abnormal embryos had abnormally large amounts of cells in
the blastocoel. All the cells radiated with UV-C
seem
delayed
in development or dead at the beginning of development of
the vegetal plate. Most embryos did not undergo
gastrulation.
The UV-C damages the embryos somewhere between the second
cleavage and gastrulation. The amount of
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