Article
Temporal variation in larval biochemical condition at hatching of the red squat lobster Pleuroncodes monodon (Decapoda: Munididae) from Humboldt Current System
Variación temporal en la condición bioquímica de las larvas en la eclosión de la langosta roja (Pleuroncodes monodon (Decapoda: Munididae) del sistema de corriente Humboldt)
Registro en:
INVERTEBRATE REPRODUCTION & DEVELOPMENT 2019, VOL. 63, NO. 4, 282–293
0792-4259
Autor
Seguel, Victoria
Guzmán, Fabián
Bascur, Miguel
Riera, Rodrigo
Urzúa, Ángel
Resumen
Environmental variables are pivotal factors for the condition of marine invertebrate species with
a complex life cycle, influencing larval biochemical composition, and therefore, indirectly affecting later benthic stages. We herein explore the physiological responses of the fishery resource the
red squat lobster (Pleuroncodes monodon) under contrasting environmental conditions of seawater surface temperature and planktonic food availability in the Humboldt Current System
(HCS), through the analysis of larval condition and its consequences in the HCS. Larval condition
was measured as dry weight, biochemical composition and fatty acids profile at hatching during
‘late summer’ (i.e. March) and ‘early winter’ (i.e. June). Larvae hatching from larger eggs produced
in winter months showed a higher size, dry weight and a higher content of bioenergetic fuel (i.e.
lipids and essential fatty acids) compared to those from larvae hatching in summer months.
Temperature and food availability can to be key driving factors favouring an evolution of
temporal variability in larval condition of the red squat lobster. These physiological adaptations
provide an extension of the reproductive period of P. monodon, specifically planktonic larval
development during ‘early winter’, characterized by a period with restricted food availability and
lower temperatures than ‘late summer’.