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Development,metamorphosis, and natural history of the nudibranch Doridella obscura Verrill (Corambidae: Opisthobranchia)
Authors:Frank E Perron  Ruth D Turner
Institution:Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass., U.S.A.
Abstract:The doridacean nudibranch Doridella obscura Verrill was raised through one complete generation in laboratory culture, and spawning behavior monitored for a year at monthly intervals in Barnegat Bay, New Jersey.The nudibranch deposited egg masses throughout the year in Barnegat Bay, and the larvae remained viable at temperatures ranging from 1.5 to 28 °C. At 25 °C the eggs hatch 4 days after oviposition, and the planktotrophic veliger larvae swim and feed for 9 days before they metamorphose. Settlement occurs specifically on the bryozoan Electro crustulenta (Pallas). The spirally coiled larval shell grows rapidly until the dorsal mantle fold is retracted from the aperture 5–6 days after hatching. Although starved larvae grow only slightly and do not metamorphose, they resume normal development on introduction of suitable food. Newly metamorphosed juveniles consume algae and debris on the surface of the bryozoan until they grow large enough to attack the living zooids of E. crustulenta.The life cycle of Doridella obscura is short (26 days at 25 °C), allowing the nudibranchs to take advantage of short-lived Electra crustulenta colonies in unstable habitats in bays and estuaries.
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