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Interactive effects of sublethal predation and body size on siphon production of the bivalve Nuttallia olivacea
Authors:Takeshi Tomiyama  Michio Omori
Affiliation:Graduate School of Agricultural Science, Tohoku University, Aoba-ku, Sendai 981-8555, Japan
Abstract:This paper is intended to reveal effects of siphon cropping on siphon production of a tellinacean bivalve Nuttallia olivacea, an important prey for juvenile stone flounder. We carried out a two-way field experiment in which bivalves of three treatments (3-times siphon removal, 1-time removal, no removal) and four size classes (9-50 mm shell length) were caged and placed in the field for 3 mo. Growth of repeatedly-removed bivalves was inhibited, indicating reduced siphon growth (natural increase of siphon size according to somatic growth). However, siphon production of removed bivalves was larger than non-removed bivalves, possibly because of siphon regeneration. Juveniles (N. olivacea < 20 mm shell length) showed high growth performance. Their siphon growth was greater than their siphon regeneration. In all bivalves except juveniles, siphon regeneration was greater than siphon growth and engendered high siphon production. Siphon growth was dependent on bivalve size and was only slightly reduced by siphon loss, but siphon regeneration seemed to be dependent mostly on the extent of siphon loss. Greater siphon removal enhanced larger siphon production. These results indicate that intensive siphon cropping by juvenile stone flounder induces high siphon production without serious impact on N. olivacea.
Keywords:Body size   Growth inhibition   Nuttallia olivacea   Siphon regeneration   Sublethal predation   Tissue production
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