OBSERVATIONS ON THE GROWTH, REPRODUCTION AND FEEDING OF THE NUDIBRANCH ARMINA TIGRINA |
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Authors: | EYSTER LINDA S. |
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Affiliation: | Belle W. Baruch Institute for Marine Biology and Coastal Research and Department of Biology; University of South Carolina Columbia, South Carolina U.S.A. 29208 |
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Abstract: | One specimen of the sand-burrowing nudibranch Armina tigrinaRafinesque was collected from South Carolina in June. The specimendeposited a single egg mass of approximately 6500 white eggswhich developed into lecithotrophic veligers in 8 days at 23°C.Of the veligers which metamorphosed, 9 lived 45.5 months(i.e. the life cycle was subannual). Eight individuals reachedsexual maturity in about 80 days. Copulation began at a bodylength of 24 mm and oviposition at 28 mm. During the 1.5 monthegg-laying period, each individual laid 24 wavy egg masseswith 20007000 eggs per mass. Death followed oviposition.Average growth rate of fed and starved pre-ovipositional nudibranchswas 3.4% and 0.9% per day respectively. Growth rate of ovipositingspecimens was 0.6% or less per day. Based on average feedingrates, each nudibranch consumed approximately 1.6 g damp weightof Renilla reniformis (one small colony) between metamorphosisand egg laying and 6.1 g damp weight (about two average colonies)from egg laying to death. Feeding efficiency is presumably increasedby interlocking and abutting radular teeth. Egg diameters reportedfor Armina tigrina from South Carolina and Florida were 199µm and 82 µm respectively. This difference suggeststhe existence of two species of Armina or ne species with twogeographically separated developmental types. Current address: Marine Science Institute, Northeastern University,Nahant, Massachusetts 01908. U.S.A. (Received 10 April 1980; |
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