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1.
B. Jantz  D. Neumann 《Oecologia》1998,114(2):213-225
In a Rhine River bypass built at a water pollution control station, the growth and reproductive cycle of the zebra mussel (Dreissena polymorpha) were studied over a period of nearly 3 years. The experimental setup offered the possibility to manipulate the temperature of the continuously passing river water and to calculate influences of temperature and food on the growth of individually marked mussels. Shell growth rates were a function of algal density (measured as chlorophyll a). This function followed saturation curves with temperature-dependent plateau levels, and saturation occurred at values above 40 μg/l chlorophyll a. The relationship between shell growth rate and temperature followed the courses of bell-shaped curves with algal-food-dependent heights. No clear correlations could be found between shell growth and other environmental factors such as dissolved organic matter, total organic content, seston, and turbidity. Two spawning periods per year characterized the reproductive cycle of the zebra mussels at the study site. The first one covered nearly 3 months (April to July) comprising several spawning events. The second shorter one occurred in August. Young mussels of the first spawning period settled at the end of May, and they were able to reproduce a few months later (end of August) when their shell length exceeded 9 mm. This first spawning period of the young-of-the-years coincided with the second spawning period of the older generations. Through the combined analysis of the results of both body weight determinations and shell growth experiments, it was possible to model mussel growth over a period of nearly 3 successive years, and to suggest the presence of an endogenous factor that might be involved in determining the start of the annual shell growth period. Received: 8 April 1997 / Accepted: 3 November 1997  相似文献   

2.
Ecological processes that differentiate and maintain intertidal populations of mussels, Perna canaliculus, were studied within three sites at Ninety Mile Beach, northern New Zealand. At these three sites (Scott Point, The Bluff and Tonatona Beach), the dynamics of larval availability, primary and secondary settlement, recruitment and mortality rates were investigated at various spatial and temporal scales. (1) Mussel concentrations in seawater were variable with respect to study site and time of year, with highest abundances at the northernmost population (Scott Point) and lowest concentrations at the middle population (The Bluff). In seawater at all three sites, small mussels (< 0.25 mm in shell length) were more abundant in August 2000, while larger mussels (> 0.5 mm in shell length) were more abundant in March 2001. (2) Primary and secondary settlement patterns were investigated during short-term (daily) and long-term (monthly) settlement experiments, within quadrats that were cleared of all mussels in both the mussel bed and in adjacent algal band habitats. At all sites, primary settlement (< 0.5 mm in shell length) was high within the algal band habitat in August 1999, 2000 and 2001. Conversely, secondary settlement (> 2.0 mm in shell length) was high within cleared areas in the mussel beds in November-March 1999-2000 and 2000-2001. Abundance of mussels settling on artificial substrates placed in the intertidal did not differ greatly from comparable areas of natural substrates (bare rock or algae within cleared quadrats). (3) Recruitment and mortality rates were recorded during monthly surveys of the adult populations. Within three mussel size classes (< 24, 25-74 and > 75 mm in shell length), peak recruitment coincided with high mortality in August of the 2 years studied. However, the most dramatic turnover of the population was observed at Scott Point in both years, following a spawning event. In adjacent waters at Scott Point, large accumulations of drift algae covered (up to 100% cover) with juvenile mussels may deplete food supplies usually delivered to intertidal adult mussels, causing their demise. Mats of adult mussels were observed “peeling-off” from the rocky shore at this time of the year, making space available to the new recruits. Where nearshore algal accumulations were moderate to low, only moderate to low mussel turnovers were observed (e.g. Tonatona Beach and The Bluff).  相似文献   

3.

The age and growth history of individual mussels collected from the cooling water culverts of a power station were determined from the growth bands present in acetate peels of polished and etched shell sections. During periods of exposure to the antifouling agent, sodium hypochlorite (0.2mgl‐1), shell growth was severely reduced, resulting in marked changes in the structure and deposition of the shell. As a consequence of chlorination, the growth rate of the mussel population occurring within the culverts was substantially lower and the mean length‐at‐age significantly smaller than that of a naturally occurring population immediately outside the cooling water intake. The growth patterns present in the shells of mussels experimentally added to the cooling waters during chlorination were compared with, and found to be similar to, the patterns in the shells of mussels that had settled naturally in the culverts. The daily growth of the experimentally exposed mussels (1.1–5.2 μm d‐1) is two orders of magnitude lower than the growth rate of mussels growing in untreated waters. The use of mussels for evaluating the efficiency and long‐term effects of low level chlorination is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
ABSTRACT

The South American charru mussel, Mytella strigata, was recently recorded in Singapore waters, possibly introduced into Southeast Asia through shipping. The mussels have rapidly spread across estuarine coastal mudflats. Adult mussels were collected, spawned in aquaria and larvae were successfully cultured to the juvenile stage in the laboratory. The larval morphology and development of M. strigata is described in this paper. D-shaped veligers were produced within 20 h of fertilization and were approximately 75 µm in shell length. These larvae were capable of settlement two weeks post fertilization. Given an adequate amount of food, they were able to grow up to 1 mm in shell length within 30 days. The larval shell of M. strigata possesses anterodorsal G2 hinge teeth as distinct wavy ledges, with a pitted resilial ridge clearly evident in the juvenile shell.  相似文献   

5.
The intensity of infection of the mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis Lamarck in the Black Sea by the turbellarian Urastoma cyprinae (Graff), which lives on its gills, was found to be higher in larger hosts, reaching a maximum in mussels of 50–70 mm length. Greater numbers occured in mussels inhabiting a silty bottom than in cultivated mussels suspended above the bottom. Over the period 1982–1987, U. cyprinae was most numerous in winter and especially so in years that were colder. The spionid polychaete Polydora ciliata (Johnston) also infects M. galloprovincialis, burrowing into the shell. Young spionids of up to 1 mm length occured in mussels with a shell length of 35 mm. Numbers of this commensal reached a maximum in mussels of intermediate size.  相似文献   

6.
The red-rimmed melania Melanoides tuberculata (O. F. Müller) has been used in the aquarist trade and biocontrol programs, leading to its emergence outside its native range. Two populations of the red-rimmed melania occur in Slovakia. We investigated the morphometric features of mentioned populations and made a comparison. These two populations differ significantly in investigated features. Mean shell length of red-rimmed melania individuals from the Opatovce nad Nitrou was 14.7 mm, while the mean shell length of specimens from Pie??any was 24.4 mm (p?<?10?6). Mean shell width, aperture length, and aperture width for specimens from the Opatovce nad Nitrou was 4.4 mm, 4.1 mm, and 2.3 mm, respectively. Mean shell width, aperture length, and aperture width of Pie??any specimens was 7.5 mm (p?<?10?6), 7.1 mm (p?<?10?6), and 3.8 mm (p?<?10?6), respectively. The maximum shell length of specimens from the Opatovce nad Nitrou site was 22–23 mm, while shell length of specimens from Pie??any reached 32–33 mm. Regression analysis of the shell length and shell width, aperture length and aperture width, indicate equivalent relationship of the shell patterns for the two populations. Population structure analysis provided first inside of their population status, identifying a proliferating population at the Opatovce nad Nitrou site, while only adult individuals were observed at the site in Pie??any. The red-rimmed malania is a good candidate for possible biological invasions in thermal waters of temperate zone.  相似文献   

7.
We monitored an intertidal mussel (Mytilus edulis L.) population between June 1981 and June 1982 in the Eastern Scheldt estuary (S.W. Netherlands). Density and biomass of the population remained relatively constant over the study period. The shell length growth was described by a Gompertz growth curve. The parameters of this equation were estimated from a log-log-modified Ford-Walford plot of the growth-ring data. The slope of the relationship between animal weight and shell length is season-dependent, mainly due to the spawning cycle in larger mussels.Secondary production is estimated with the growth rate method. In the calculated growth rates the change in slope of the length-weight relationship is incorporated, as well as differences in length growth rates between summer and winter. Secondary production amounts to 156 g AFDW m–2a –1 (expressed per m2 of mussel bank). P:B is 0.50 a–1. The mussel productivity is probably a limiting factor for the density of overwintering Oystercatchers (Haematopus ostralegus).  相似文献   

8.
Twenty-one monthly collections of the Antarctic limpet Nacella (Patinigera) concinna (Strebel, 1908) were obtained by divers at Signy Island, South Orkney Islands. A mean monthly population density of 123.7 ± 21.2 · m?2, mean biomass of 13.7 ± 2.7 g dry tissue wt · m?2, and annual production of 2.9 g · m?2 were recorded in the depth range 2–12 m below mean low water.Shell growth was slow with a maximum growth rate, in the first 3–5 yr of life, of 3 4 mm per year. Maturity was attained at 7–8 yr (21 mm length), and maximum size (41 mm length) at about 21 yr. Unique spawning behaviour was observed in two Austral springs, and data relating spawning to the spring increase in sea temperature were obtained.  相似文献   

9.
Dropping live mussels (Mytilus sp.) onto hard substrata by Carrion Crows (Corvus corone) and Hooded Crows (Corvus cornix) to access their flesh is a commonly observed behavior from late summer to spring in the United Kingdom and Ireland. Despite previous studies, several aspects of prey‐dropping behavior remained incompletely understood. From September 2008 to January 2010, we determined the heights of drops, likelihood of shell breakage from drops at different heights, effect of mussel size on breakability, energetic costs of flying to drop heights, and the energetic costs of transporting mussels from mussel beds to dropping sites. We studied Carrion Crows on the Isle of Cumbrae, Scotland, and Hooded Crows in Cork Harbor, Ireland. Initial experiments were carried out with mussels to determine breakability in relation to size and drop height, and to estimate mussel energy content. Sizes of mussel shells at Hooded Crow dropping sites were compared with those of live mussels from source mussel beds. Adult Carrion Crows (N = 10) dropped mussels from a mean height of 4.7 m, and adult Hooded Crows (N = 21) from 4.8 m. These heights were close to the minimum (4–4.8 m; determined experimentally) required to break all mussel shells on the first drop. Dropping mussels from the minimum height that guarantees breakage reduces handling time and, by minimizing the size of the resulting debris field, likely reduces the risk of kleptoparasitism. Juvenile Hooded Crows (N = 13) dropped mussels onto suboptimal substrates (gravelly mud) from variable heights (mean = 6.1 m) with a low success rate (0% on first drop). This inefficiency could reflect either inexperience or exclusion from prime hard‐substrate dropping sites by adults. Foraging Hooded Crows selected larger mussels, dropping no mussels <32‐mm shell length. Energetic calculations indicate that a Hooded Crow lifting a medium‐sized mussel (55‐mm shell length) to a height of 5 m incurs a cost of only 0.3% of energy assimilated from that mussel, whereas travel to and from a mussel bed 200 m away costs 5.8% of that energy. These results suggest that choice of mussel dropping height by crows is determined by shell breakability rather than the cost of flying up to the dropping height.  相似文献   

10.
A comparative study of some aspects of the reproductive biologyof Siphonaria pectinata was carried out at Gibraltar. Maturationoccurred at 5-6 mm shell length corresponding to an age of 6-12months. At the more sheltered Atlantic site spawning was evidentfrom March to June 1992 with peak spawning occurring in May-June1992. The patterns of spawning activity for the following twoyears were very similar. Egg ribbons were very scarce at themore exposed Mediterranean site and were found in considerablyless quantities than at the Atlantic site. Individuals at bothsites contained mature eggs in their gonads at the onset, andthen throughout the duration of the spawning season, but exhibitedspent gonads by October. The spawn of S. pectinata consistedof small oval ribbons filled with numerous egg-shaped capsulesspaced irregularly in a jelly-like matrix. Spawn was depositedmainly away from the home scar in shallow depressions, cracksand crevices and between barnacles and mussels. S. pectinataexhibited planktonic development. The fertilised eggs took between14 and 21 days to develop at ambient temperature (14-19°),and hatched as free-swimming planktotrophic veligers. The timingof spawning activity and the placement of egg masses in protectivemicrohabitats on the shore are discussed in terms of adaptationsto reduce desiccation stress, predation and possible food shortages.The mode of development in S. pectinata is placed in contextwith current theories regarding siphonariid ancestry and evolution. (Received 6 January 1998; accepted 25 June 1998)  相似文献   

11.
To decide whether a physiological role can be attributed to enzymatic activity with respect to crystal formation and biomineralization of the first larval shell, carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity was measured in embryos and larvae of the blue mussels Mytilus edulis L. Also, CA activity was determined in the mantle edge and gonads of adult mussels with different shell length and condition index. The intention was to find a possible correlation between CA activity and adult shell calcification, i.e. gonadal maturation. The comparison of CA activity in different developmental stages of mussels and the results of an X-ray diffraction study of biomineralization processes in embryonic and larval shells indicate that CA activity is maximal at the end of several developmental stages. Consequently, the increase in CA activity precedes some physiological changes, i.e. the somatoblast 2d formation and the occurrence of the first calcite and quartz crystals in embryos, shell field formation in the gastrula stage, shell gland and periostracum production in trochophores, and rapid aragonite deposition in larval prodissoconch I and prodissoconch II shells. Furthermore, it was found that in adult mussels CA activity was quite variable and that in the mantle edge it was frequently inversely related to the activity in the gonad. Received: 28 November 1998 / Received in revised form: 30 August 1999 / Accepted: 31 August 1999  相似文献   

12.
The reproductive cycle of aMytilus edulis population in the lower tidal zone at the island of Helgoland from Spring 1980 to Summer 1981 is described. In both years the spawning period extended from the end of April until the end of June at water temperatures between 6° and 14°C. The gametes were built up again in autumn and most individuals were mature in February. Sex ratio did not differ significantly from 1:1. Fecundity, egg diameter and gamete weight of this and another population in the subtidal zone were assessed and size frequency distribution of shell lengths was established. Based on data of body weight prior to spawning, the following tendencies could be outlined: animals of the intertidal population had significantly smaller eggs than those from the subtidal area. Although the soft body biomass per unit area of the subtidal population was nearly double that of the tidal, their annual egg output was nearly the same (2.3 × 109 eggs m?2). This was achieved by a smaller size at the onset of sexual maturation (18 mm instead of 30 mm shell length) and a higher egg output at comparable shell lengths in the intertidal. In both populations, large animals contributed most to gamete production, although they did not necessarily dominate in biomass.  相似文献   

13.
The invasive alien crayfish Pacifastacus leniusculus is considered harmful to freshwater pearl mussels Margaritifera laevis and M. togakushiensis. It also often colonises mussel habitats in Japan. In order to test the negative effects of alien crayfish on mussels, we evaluated the predation impact of signal crayfish on freshwater pearl mussels in vitro. We tested the relationship between the survival/injury rates of mussels and crayfish predation with respect to different sizes of mussels (four classes based on shell length: 10, 30, 50 and 70 mm). Crayfish selectively fed on the flesh of the 10-mm size class mussels after breaking their shells. The shell margins of mussels in all size classes were injured by crayfish. Results also showed that crayfish particularly injured the 50-mm size class of mussels. This observation could be attributed to this mussel size being the most suitable shell size (29.56–37.73 mm in carapace length) that the crayfish can effectively hold. This study shows that the presence of invasive crayfish reduces freshwater pearl mussel populations by damaging the shell margins and/or killing the mussels. This negative impact of invasive crayfish not only decreases the mussel population but could also limit mussel recruitment, growth and reproduction.  相似文献   

14.
The effect of salinity on the filtration rate of blue mussels, Mytilus edulis, from the brackish Great Belt (Denmark) and the low-saline Central Baltic Sea, respectively, was studied. First, we measured the effect of long-term (weeks) constant ambient salinities between 5 and 30 psu on the filtration rate of M. edulis collected in the Great Belt where the mean salinity is 17 psu. At salinities between 10 and 30 psu, the filtration rates did not vary much, but at 5 psu the filtration rates were significantly lower. Next, we studied dwarfed M. edulis (<25 mm shell length) from Central Baltic Sea (Askö, Sweden) where the mean salinity is 6.5 psu. The maximum filtration rate (F, ml min?1 ind.?1) as a function of shell length (L, mm) and dry weight of soft parts (W, mg) were found to be: F = 0.003L 2.71 and F = 0.478W 0.92, respectively, and these results indicate that the filtration rates of dwarfed Baltic Sea mussels are comparable to filtration rates of Great Belt mussels of similar size exposed to salinities >10 psu. When Baltic Sea mussels acclimatized to 20 psu in the laboratory were exposed to 6.5 psu this caused a drastic reduction in the filtration rate, but after about 2 days the previous high filtration rate was regained at 6.5 psu, and further, a similar pattern was observed when the 6.5 psu exposed mussels were finally re-exposed to 20 psu. The observed lack of Great Belt mussels to completely adjust to 5 psu, in contrast to the ease of Baltic Sea mussels to adjust back and forth between 6.5 and 20 psu, is remarkable and may perhaps be explained by different genotypes of Great Belt and Baltic Sea mussels.  相似文献   

15.
The life history, reproductive ecology and habitat utilization of the Itasenpara (deepbody) bitterling Acheilognathus longipinnis were investigated in a lowland segment of the Moo River in Toyama Prefecture, central Honshu, Japan. Analysis of 1285 individuals revealed that the study population comprised a single size class, an age at maturation of 3 months and a life span of 1 year. On the basis of the growth pattern, the life cycle was divided into two stages: the juvenile stage, characterized by rapid growth, and the adult stage at which growth ceased. Spawning by A. longipinnis was recorded between early September and late October. Female A. longipinnis in the 0+ year age class began to mature when they reached a standard length (LS) of 56·4 mm. Mature females had a large clutch size (maximum 273 eggs) and deposited highly adhesive and relatively large eggs (2·55 mm3; major axis, 3·12 mm; minor axis, 1·22 mm) via a short ovipositor (mean length, 21·5 mm) into freshwater mussels. The embryos remained in the gill cavities of the freshwater mussels (used as a spawning substratum) and emerged as juveniles (LS, 9 mm). Habitat utilization during spawning was analysed using a generalized linear model. The best‐fit model showed that three environmental factors (freshwater mussel availability, water depth and vegetation cover) were important variables for habitat utilization by A. longipinnis. Shallow areas (water depth, 250–330 mm) created for rice paddy management and areas with an abundance of cover were particularly effective for predator avoidance. These results suggest that maintenance of water level fluctuations corresponding with rice cultivation and the abundance of vegetation on the river bank (particularly avoidance of concrete revetments) is essential for conservation of this species under current practices for rice cultivation in Japan.  相似文献   

16.
Summary

The zebra mussel, Dreissena polymorpha, is a freshwater biofouling bivalve unintentionally introduced in the 1980s into North America from Europe. Oocyte maturation (germinal vesicle breakdown, GVBD) and spawning of the zebra mussel can be triggered with serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT). In pharmacological experiments to characterize the receptor mediating spawning, the serotonin receptor agonists 8-OH-DPAT, TFMPP, and 1-(1-naphthyl)piperazine were effective at stimulating spawning; whereas, 2-methylserotonin and alpha-methylserotonin had no effect. In experiments with antagonists of serotonin receptors ketanserin and propranolol had no effect; mianserin, NAN-190, and cyproheptadine had partial inhibitory effects; and methiothepin was a very effective antagonist. Metergoline had mixed agonist/antagonist properties. Ergotamine was the most effective activator of spawning in females. Compared to serotonergic receptors in other organisms, the receptors that activate spawning in zebra mussels resemble 5HTlym, 5HTdro2 and human 5HT1Dβ, which are receptors that may act both by inhibiting adenylyl cyclase and by activating phospholipase C. In zebra mussels, 5-HT and 8-OH-DPAT activate GVBD in gonad fragments, a process also initiated by manual dissection of gonad fragments. GVBD can be inhibited by pre-treatment of ovaries with forskolin and theophylline, suggesting an inhibitory role for cyclic AMP. The Ca2+ ionophore A23187 can trigger GVBD and polar body formation. Thus, oocyte maturation in zebra mussels may be initiated via serotonergic receptors simultaneously inhibiting adenylyl cyclase and activating Ca2+ mechanisms.  相似文献   

17.

The attachment strength of the freshwater mussel Limnoperna fortunei against water flow was studied. Newton's expression successfully described the hydrodynamic drag force acting on the mussel with a drag coefficient value of 1.03. The drag‐resistant force (defined as hydrodynamic drag force at mussel detachment) was smaller than the detachment force measured using a tensile load test. A fairly good correlation was obtained between the drag‐resistant force and the number of secreted threads. The drag‐resistant force divided by the number of threads increased with shell size, suggesting that byssal thread strength increased with mussel growth. For the mussel specimens obtained from a water transmission pipe, thread width increased with shell size. However, thread width was not dependent on current velocity. There was no correlation between the number of secreted threads and shell length, which indicated that the number of secreted threads did not change with mussel size. Therefore, the water velocity needed to detach mussels increases with shell size of the mussel when the number of secreted threads is constant. The increases in the water velocity to detach mussels with larger shells suggests that the mussel becomes more resistant to water flow as it grows. It is estimated that a flow velocity of around lms‐1 is critical for attachment/detachment of a juvenile mussel with a shell length of a few millimeters and one hundred byssal threads.  相似文献   

18.
Information on growth during the larval and young‐of‐year life stages in natural river environments is generally lacking for most sturgeon species. In this study, methods for estimating ages and quantifying growth were developed for field‐sampled larval and young‐of‐year shovelnose sturgeon Scaphirhynchus platorynchus in the upper Missouri River. First, growth was assessed by partitioning samples of young‐of‐year shovelnose sturgeon into cohorts, and regressing weekly increases in cohort mean length on sampling date. This method quantified relative growth because ages of the cohorts were unknown. Cohort increases in mean length among sampling dates were positively related (P < 0.05, r2 > 0.59 for all cohorts) to sampling date, and yielded growth rate estimates of 0.80–2.95 mm day−1 (2003) and 0.44–2.28 mm day−1 (2004). Highest growth rates occurred in the largest (and earliest spawned) cohorts. Second, a method was developed to estimate cohort hatch dates, thus age on date of sampling could be determined. This method included quantification of post‐hatch length increases as a function of water temperature (growth capacity; mm per thermal unit, mm TU−1), and summation of mean daily water temperatures to achieve the required number of thermal units that corresponded to post‐hatch lengths of shovelnose sturgeon on sampling dates. For six of seven cohorts of shovelnose sturgeon analyzed, linear growth models (r2 ≥ 0.65, P < 0.0001) or Gompertz growth models (r2 ≥ 0.83, P < 0.0001) quantified length‐at‐age from hatch through 55 days post‐hatch (98–100 mm). Comparisons of length‐at‐age derived from the growth models indicated that length‐at‐age was greater for the earlier‐hatched cohorts than later‐hatched cohorts. Estimated hatch dates for different cohorts were corroborated based on the dates that newly‐hatched larval shovelnose sturgeon were sampled in the drift. These results provide the first quantification of growth dynamics for field‐sampled age‐0 shovelnose sturgeon in a natural river environment, and provide an accurate method for estimating age of wild‐caught individuals. Methods of age determination used in this study have applications to sturgeons in other regions, but require additional testing and validation.  相似文献   

19.
The reproductive biology, sexual strategy and sex ratio of the freshwater donacid Galatea paradoxa in the Volta River estuary, Ghana, was studied from March 2008 to February 2010. Histological observations of the gonads showed that G. paradoxa is gonochoristic with dominance by females (80%) and a high incidence of hermaphrodites (9.4%) for individuals ranged between 20 and 82?mm in shell length. There was a single spawning event between July and October. Gametogenesis started in December, progressing steadily to a peak in June–July when spawning began, until November when individuals were spent. The dominance of females coupled with the high incidence of hermaphroditism may be a reflection of populations subjected to increasing fishing pressure and over-exploitation.  相似文献   

20.
Abstract

The reproductive cycle and growth of the pen shell, Atrina maura, which was cultured in the Ensenada Pabellones lagoon system, Gulf of California, from March 2008 to March 2009, is described in this article. Histological techniques and the condition index were used to determine its reproductive condition. The sex ratio was 0.57 females:1.72 males within the population studied. There were no differences (χ2, p < 0.05) in shell length (SL) between males and females. The mean length of the sampled specimens ranged between 50.99 ± 4.86 mm and 218.16 ± 8.87 mm. The histological results confirmed that A. maura is a gonochoristic organism that presents synchronic development of the gonads. The maturity and spawning phases were observed throughout the study period, with the exception of March and May 2008. The frequency of the gonad development stages obtained per month suggests that this species reproduced two times annually, with one important reproductive period from June to September, a minor reproductive period from November to February, and two resting periods as follows: July to August and January to February 2009.  相似文献   

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