Article
The effects of nurse eggs and sibling interactions on the larval development of the poecilogonous annelid Boccardia proboscidea (Spionidae)
Registro en:
Invertebrate Biology 133
1744-7410
Autor
Oyarzun, Fernanda X.
Brante, Antonio
Resumen
Artículo de publicación ISI In poecilogony, different types of larvae are produced within the same species.
Previous studies have suggested maternal control of the production of larval types; however,
it is not clear which factors or mechanisms generate contrasting developmental patterns
among siblings. The spionid polychaete Boccardia proboscidea produces within the same
capsule adelphophagic larvae that eat nurse eggs and siblings and complete all or most of
their development inside the capsule (Type A larvae), and larvae with little growth until
they hatch as planktotrophic larvae (Type B larvae). In this study, we manipulated capsule
content to explore the factors determining larval type in B. proboscidea and the role of
extra-embryonic maternal nutrition and sib–sib interaction in the developmental fate of offspring.
When early larval stages were grown individually in vitro, with nurse eggs as the
only food source, some of them remained small, while others continue developing into larger
pre-competent larvae by feeding on nurse eggs. This suggests that larval types in
B. proboscidea are determined very early in development and are not solely the product of
sib–sib interaction inside the capsule. However, our data also suggest that hatching size variability
within larval types of a clutch depends on nurse egg availability. Type B larvae grew
normally to metamorphosis when phytoplankton was available, but suffered high rates of
cannibalism by Type A larvae. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that individual
larval fates are determined very early in development and that once their fate is
determined, hatching size and intracapsular survival are affected by maternal food provisioning
and sibling interaction.