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Resolution: standard / high Figure 3.
Various traditional and digital morphological visualization techniques, shown in an
exemplary fashion using cidaroid sea urchins (Echinoidea: Cidaroida). A Habitus of a museum specimen of Eucidaris metularia (NHM 1969.5.1.15-40), aboral view. B Historical drawing of the internal anatomy of Cidaris cidaris, a closely related species - modified after Stewart [47]. C Volume rendering of the external anatomy of the specimen shown in A, based on a ~25 GB large μCT dataset with 13.91 μm isotropic resolution. D Virtual horizontal section of the μCT dataset at the level of Aristotle's lantern
(see also Fig. 2). E Surface rendering of the external and internal anatomy of the specimen shown in A based on a ~100 MB large 3D MRI dataset with 81 μm isotropic resolution. F Virtual horizontal section of the MRI dataset at the level of Aristotle's lantern,
digestive tract, and gonads. By clicking anywhere onto this figure, an interactive,
partially labeled 3D model of the analyzed species will open (requires Adobe Acrobat
Reader 8.0 or higher, see [10,43,44,46] for detailed information regarding 3D modeling and labeling). The museum specimen
of Eucidaris metularia was photographed using a digital camera with 7.2 megapixel resolution (Exilim: Casio
Computer Co., Tokyo, Japan). 3D visualization was carried out using volume rendering
in VG Studio Max 2.0 (C) and threshold-based as well as manual segmentation followed by surface rendering
in Amira 5.2 (E).
Ziegler et al. Biology Direct 2010 5:45 doi:10.1186/1745-6150-5-45 |