Facultative lecithotrophy during larval development of the burrowing shrimp Callianassa tyrrhena (Decapoda : Callianassidae)

Publication Type:Journal Article
Year of Publication:1999
Authors:Thessalou-Legaki, M., Peppa, A., Zacharaki, M.
Journal:Marine BiologyMarine Biology
Volume:133
Pagination:635-642
Date Published:MAY
Accession Number:ISI:000080539500006
Keywords:abbreviated development, brachyuran crabs, Crustacea, grapsidae, palinuridae, periods, requirements, starvation resistance, temperature, thalassinidea
Abstract:

Survival, developmental and consumption rate (Artemia nauplii ingested per day) as well as predation efficiency (ingested per available Artemia nauplii) were studied during the larval development of the shallow-water burrowing thalassinid Callianassa tyrrhena (Petagna, 1792), which exhibits an abbreviated type of development with only two zoeal stages and a megalopa. The larvae, hatched from berried females from S. Euboikos Bay (Aegean Sea, Greece), were reared at 10 temperature-food density combinations (19 and 24 degrees C; 0, 2, 4, 8 and 16 Artemia nauplii d(-1)). Enhanced starvation resistance was evident: 92 and 58% of starved zoeas I molted to zoea II, while metamorphosis to megalopa was achieved by 76 and 42% of the hatched zoeas at 19 and 24 degrees C, respectively. The duration of both zoeal stages was affected by temperature, food density and their interaction. Nevertheless, starvation showed different effects at the two temperatures: compared to the fed shrimp, the starved zoeae exhibited accelerated development at 19 degrees C (8.4 d) but delayed metamorphosis at 24 degrees C (5.9 d). On the other hand, both zoeal stages were able to consume food at an increased rate as food density and temperature increased. Predation efficiency also increased with temperature, but never exceeded 0.6. Facultative lecithotrophy, more pronounced during the first zoeal stage of C. tyrrhena, can be regarded as an adaptation of a species whose larvae can respond physiologically to the different temperature-food density combinations encountered in the wide geographical range of their natural habitat.

Scratchpads developed and conceived by (alphabetical): Ed Baker, Katherine Bouton Alice Heaton Dimitris Koureas, Laurence Livermore, Dave Roberts, Simon Rycroft, Ben Scott, Vince Smith