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Gosselin, L. A.; Sewell, M. A. (2012). Reproduction, larval development and settlement of the intertidal serpulid polychaete Spirobranchus cariniferus. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom. 93(05): 1249-1256.
191683
10.1017/s0025315412001701 [view]
Gosselin, L. A.; Sewell, M. A.
2012
Reproduction, larval development and settlement of the intertidal serpulid polychaete Spirobranchus cariniferus
Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom
93(05): 1249-1256
Publication
World Polychaeta Database (WPolyDb)
Serpulid polychaetes are often important components of marine communities, yet current knowledge of serpulid reproduction, development and settlement is largely based on the study of only a few species. This study examined whether spawning and sexual development of the mid-intertidal serpulid Spirobranchus cariniferus are typical of patterns observed in other serpulids, and also examined the effect of diet on larval development and identified cues that induce metamorphosis. Populations of S. cariniferus on the east and west coasts of New Zealand's North Island had an extended spawning season with a high proportion (75-100%) of individuals carrying ripe gametes at any given time from the late spring to early autumn, consistent with other serpulid species. However, contrary to proposed patterns of sexual development in serpulids, sex-ratios and average male and female body masses suggest S. cariniferus are not protandric hermaphrodites. A diet experiment revealed that larval growth was fastest when provided with a mixed diet of three algal species. Solutions of 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine at a concentration of 10(-4) M were potent inducers of metamorphosis in S. cariniferus larvae, revealing that competence is reached by 13-15 days after fertilization. When exposed to surfaces coated with conspecific tube or tissue homogenates, 6% of competent larvae settled and metamorphosed on surfaces coated with tube homogenate whereas none settled on tissue homogenate or in the controls, suggesting specific cues are required for settlement and the likely presence of a settlement cue in the tubes of adult worms, consistent with the highly gregarious distribution of the species.
New Zealand
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