Artigo Revisado por pares

Early development, settlement, growth, and spatial distribution of the sea cucumber Cucumaria frondosa (Echinodermata: Holothuroidea)

1996; Canadian Science Publishing; Volume: 53; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1139/f95-186

ISSN

1205-7533

Autores

Jean‐François Hamel, Annie Mercier,

Tópico(s)

Marine Biology and Environmental Chemistry

Resumo

Cucumaria frondosawas studied in the field and in the laboratory to elucidate its development, growth, substrate selection, and migration patterns. In 1992 and 1993, spawnings in the laboratory and in the lower St. Lawrence Estuary occurred in mid-June. Males spawned first, followed shortly by females. The fertilized eggs and resulting embryos were buoyant. They developed into pentactula 9 d after fertilization. In the laboratory, embryonic development was fastest at 12°C, pH 8, and salinity 26 psu (practical salinity unit). The first contact of embryos with the substrate, made with the tentacles, occurred ca. 48 d after fertilization. Following a search period of 3-40 h, settlement was achieved using the ambulacral podia. Laboratory and field observations showed that gravel or rock were favored by larvae during settlement. After reaching ca. 2.8 mm in length, ca. 4-5 months later, young sea cucumbers moved to sheltered, illuminated areas of rocky substrate, and migrated from protected to exposed areas after they exceeded ca. 35 mm in length. Overall, the growth rates were maximal during the spring and summer phytoplanktonic blooms with rising temperature. Field observations showed a size-dependent migration from photic to aphotic depths (≥40 m depth), when the animals reached sexual maturity.

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