Factors influencing swimming in bay scallops, Argopectenirradians (Lamarck, 1819) |
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Authors: | M.A. Winter P.V. Hamilton |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biology, University of West Florida, Pensacola, FL 32514, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | Factors influencing the probability, distance, and direction of swimming in bay scallops (Argopectenirradions Lamarck, 1819) were studied through a series of experimental releases in the field and in a 3-m tank. The probability of a scallop swimming was significantly influenced by the type of substratum on which it was released (sand vs. grassbed), by contact with two natural gastropod predators (Murex, Fasciolaria), and by the amount of rest allowed after a previous swim. The horizontal distance traveled by a swimming scallop was significantly influenced by artificial weight of a magnitude equivalent to a normal load of shell-encrusting organisms, by the amount of rest allowed after a previous swim, by the height attained in the water column, and by the scallop's size. The direction of scallop swimming was significantly influenced by the location along the mantle edge where a predator was contacted, and by factors probably related to the asymmetrical water flow pattern through the mantle cavity. Swimming in bay scallops apparently serves to maintain position in grassbeds and to avoid predators. |
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Keywords: | scallop swimming habitat predators fouling orientation Author to whom correspondence should be addressed. |
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