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Reproductive strategy of an isopod Onisocryptus ovalis,parasitizing a bioluminescent myodocope ostracod Vargula hilgendorfii
Authors:Abe  Katsumi  Horiuchi  Jun
Institution:(1) Department of Life and Earth Sciences, Shizuoka University, Oya 836, Shizuoka, Shizuoka, 422, Japan
Abstract:The functional morphology and the reproductive strategy of a parasitic isopod Onisocryptus ovalis in a bioluminescent ostracod Vargula hilgendorfii as its final host were studied based on video and SEM observations. During its lifetime, Onisocryptus ovalis dramatically metamorphoses several times, changing sex from male to female in the final host's carapace. At nearly the last ontogenetical stage, the parasite anchors its body with a pair of thoracopods to the posterodorsal region of the host ostracod's trunk and loses all the other appendages and thus its mobility as well. Thereafter, the parasite reverses bodily orientation during the final moulting so as to locate its mouth in the midst of the host eggs, and finally consumes them, leaving only the egg membrane. Such a mode of feeding of the parasite following the fixation of the body is interpreted in terms of the adaptation to escape elimination from the ostracod carapace by the host's cleaning appendages (the seventh limbs) and to obtain as much space as possible for the parasite's own eggs/embryos at the sacrifice of the mother's mobility. The synchronization between the timing of metamorphosis of the parasite and the reproductive cycle of the host animal can be expected to guarantee the parasite the opportunity to exploit sufficient nutrition from the eggs of the host.
Keywords:parasite  isopod  metamorphosis  functional morphology  Myodocopa
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