info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Reproductive trade-off of the copepod Acartia tonsa in a hypersaline estuary of the Southwestern Atlantic. Temporal variations in the morphology of eggs
Fecha
2016-06Registro en:
Berasategui, Anabela Anhi; Fernandez Severini, Melisa Daiana; Menendez, Maria Clara; Biancalana, Florencia; Dutto, María Sofía; et al.; Reproductive trade-off of the copepod Acartia tonsa in a hypersaline estuary of
the Southwestern Atlantic. Temporal variations in the morphology of eggs; Taylor & Francis As; Marine Biology Research; 12; 8; 6-2016; 817-829
1745-1000
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Berasategui, Anabela Anhi
Fernandez Severini, Melisa Daiana
Menendez, Maria Clara
Biancalana, Florencia
Dutto, María Sofía
Guinder, Valeria Ana
López Abbate, María Celeste
Chazarreta, Carlo Javier
Hoffmeyer, Monica Susana
Resumen
The purpose of the present work was to study the seasonal variations in egg production, morphology and hatching success in the cryptic species Acartia tonsa, taking into account variations in female size, population abundance and environmental factors in a turbid and hypersaline estuary. Sampling was performed during the austral warm (18–23°C and 32–36 salinity) and cold seasons (5–7°C; 32–38) in Bahía Blanca Estuary (BBE), Argentina, during 2007 and 2009. Field-collected females were incubated in the laboratory simulating in situ environmental conditions, and specimens from fixed samples were measured using optical and scanning electronic microscopy. Acartia tonsa’s marked seasonality in its reproductive traits was found to ensure its permanence in the water column all over the year. During the warm season, small-sized females were observed to invest their energy in the production of subitaneous eggs with high hatching success and smooth appearance (12.95 ± 2.38 eggs f−1 day−1 and specific egg production rate (SEP) of 16.57%C f−1 day−1). During the cold season, females invested C in body mass as well as in the production of resting eggs of three different morphotypes (6.56 ± 3.2 eggs f−1 day−1 and SEP of 7.37%C f−1 day−1). Although these morphotypes were found to show differences in surface ornamentation, they exhibited the same delayed hatching behaviour. The eggs with shorter spines were found to integrate the resting egg bank in BBE. Our findings confirming a delayed egg hatching behaviour and a great tolerance to low temperatures and high salinities in the A. tonsa population in BBE suggest that this possible strain is a valuable phenotype for aquaculture.