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Asynchronous male and female life cycles in the sexually dimorphic, harem-forming isopod Paragnathia formica (Crustacea: Isopoda)
Authors:N. P. D. Upton
Affiliation:Department of Zoology, Downing St., Cambridge
Abstract:The complex life history of the sexually dimorphic, harem-forming isopod Paragnathia formica Hesse is described, combining published information with new observations. The results of a two-and-a-half year field study, carried out within the animal's saltmarsh habitat, are presented, revealing significant differences in the life cycles of males and females. Settlement to the breeding habitat of final stage male and female larvae, derived from the same annual generation, was recorded at very different times of the year. The total lifespan of males was shown to be twice that of females.
The larvae, temporary ectoparasites of estuarine fish, and the non-feeding, burrow-living adults are described and categorized into several developmental phases, whose numbers were recorded during the course of the study.
The annual production of larvae during a limited period in the autumn, and the subsequent settlement of final stage larval females and males the following year, were monitored. Larval females entered the burrows of adult males in the spring to breed, and died after releasing viviparous broods in the autumn. Larval males settled later in the summer, reaching adulthood in the autumn and overwintering before breeding some 18 months after their birth and dying at the end of the breeding season. Adult males thus bred with females from the next generation. The differences in male and female life cycles led to great seasonal variations in adult sex ratios, a huge winter bias towards males contrasting with a brief excess of females in the summer.
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