1. Seasonality in reproduction of the deep-water pennatulacean coral Anthoptilum grandiflorum
- Author
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Baillon, Sandrine, Hamel, Jean-Francois, Wareham, Vonda E., and Mercier, Annie
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Corals -- Physiological aspects -- Environmental aspects ,Environment -- Research ,Biological sciences - Abstract
The deep-sea pennatulacean coral Anthoptilum grandiflorum exhibits a cosmopolitan distribution and was recently determined to serve as habitat for other invertebrates and fish larvae in the northwest Atlantic. Colonies collected at bathyal depths between 2006 and 2010 in eastern Canada were analysed to determine their fecundity and characterize spatial and temporal trends in their reproductive cycle. Anthoptilum grandiflorum is a gonochoric broadcast spawner with a sex ratio that does not differ significantly from equality (although one hermaphrodite colony was observed). In male colonies, all the spermatocysts synthesized become mature over the annual cycle, while only ~21 % of the initial production of oocytes reaches maturity in female colonies. Female potential fecundity based on mature oocytes just before spawning was on average 13 oocytes [polyp.sup.-1]; male potential fecundity was 48 spermatocysts [polyp.sup.-1]. The spawning period of A. grandiflorum differs between geographic regions, from April (in southern Newfoundland) to July (in Labrador), closely following regional spring phytoplankton blooms after accounting for the deposition of planktic detritus. Release of oocytes by a live colony held in the laboratory was recorded in April 2011, coincident with field data for similar latitudes. Seawater temperatures at the time of spawning were around 3.6-4.8°C in all regions and in the laboratory. Early stages of gametogenesis were detected in colonies collected shortly after the spawning season, and early and late growth stages occurred successively until December. Mature colonies were observed between April and July (depending on latitude). The diameter of mature oocytes (~1,100 µm maximum diameter) is consistent with lecithotrophic larval development., Introduction Deep-water corals form important biogenic habitats and may host several species of invertebrates and fishes (Buhl-Mortensen and Mortensen 2004; Roberts et al. 2006; Baillon et al. 2012). These biogenic [...]
- Published
- 2014
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