Ronald V. Dimock, Jr.
Wake Forest Professor of Biology
Department of Biology
Wake Forest University
Winston-Salem, NC 27109
Education:
Current Research:

MUSSELS: guardians of your water quality!! Design by: W.
Rebergen,Delta Consult,Kapelle, The Netherlands. On the right is a commercial water pollution monitor based on mussel
gaping. (Delta Consult, Kapelle, NL)
The aquarium facility for housing adult and juvenile mussels in my laboratory:

Chambers housing juveniles in a down-welling system (left) and adult U.imbecillis releasing glochidia larvae (visible as mucous strands from exhalant siphons).

Glochidia larvae of the mussel Utterbackia imbecillis with the
adductor muscle stained with a fluorochrome that binds to actin filaments. The
valves are fully open. Larvae are about 280 microns in length (axis parallel to
the hinge).

Larva at day-4 of metamorphosis (upper left), with adductor muscle gone. Juvenile (upper right) 7 days post-metamorphosis showing new anterior and posterior adductor muscles. The first 3 pairs of gills filaments are partially visible (especially to the right of the mid-central foot). Lower image is of a juvenile 10 days post-metamorphosis, showing brightly fluorescing adductor muscles, some pedal musculature (center) and the heart within the pericardial sinus (toward 4 o'clock, just right of center of image, near posterior adductor).
3-week
old juvenile Pyganodon cataracta : anterior to the right, total length
about 450 microns; subtriangular part of shell is original larval shell;
brownish-green is silt and algae in stomach and digestive glands.
Juvenile P. cataracta : about 5 weeks old. Individual on right is
about 700 microns. Note new shell growth flanking foot on animal at right.
10 week
old P. cataracta approximately 3.5 mm long, showing well developed
inhalant and exhalant siphons. Animal is in process of rejecting a mass of
yellow latex beads that it has filtered out of suspension.
Same
juvenile as above showing a plume of latex beads in the flow from the exhalant
siphon.
The water mite U.
formosa on the gill of its host mussel P. cataracta
Photo by Ginger Fisher -- Female U. formosa
Mussel/mollusc related web sites:
Check out UNIO, a Listserver for anyone interested in the biology of freshwater mussels.
The Freshwater Mussel Conservation Society web site is an excellent source of information, with a lot of great links to useful resources on the web.
A nice molluscan resource site developed by Deborah Wills
Home Page of the American Microscopical Society AMS, a great place for
Invertebrate Biologists to gather.
Click on this image if
you are interested in Integrative and
Comparative Biology

An isocrinid crinoid
at a depth of 800 feet near the wreck of the "Kirks Pride", Grand Cayman Island.
The pinnate arms are extended in feeding posture. Current is flowing from right
to left.




Assorted
Invertebrates (Upper left and lower right photos by Craig Nelson)
Courses I Regularly Teach at Wake Forest University:
Marine Biology at the Duke University Marine Laboratory


During the summer I teach Marine Invertebrate Zoology at the Duke University Marine Laboratory, Beaufort NC
This course is part of the special Summer Term
II Marine Conservation and Policy which for 2003 will be July 7 to Aug 8
To get a report from my course last summer, and the DUML program, check
out Marine
Invertebrates
Home pages of a few of my former MS or PhD students
The Who and Where of My Former Graduate StudentsDepartment of Biology Home Page
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