Back to Search Start Over

Reproductive plasticity of a Procambarus clarkii population living 10°C below its thermal optimum

Authors :
Lucrezia Celeste Bonzi
Chiara Manfrin
Federica Piazza
Piero Giulio Giulianini
Luca Peruzza
Silvia Battistella
Peruzza, Luca
Piazza, Federica
Manfrin, Chiara
Bonzi, LUCREZIA CELESTE
Battistella, Silvia
Giulianini, PIERO GIULIO
Source :
Aquatic Invasions. 10:199-208
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Regional Euro-Asian Biological Invasions Centre Oy (REABIC), 2015.

Abstract

In this study the annual reproductive biology of a Procambarus clarkii (Girard, 1852) population living in an atypical habitat with cold spring waters is investigated by monitoring Gonado-Somatic and Hepato-Somatic Indexes (GSI and HSI) and by performing cytology on ovaries. Despite its known preference for habitats with water temperature from 21 to 30 °C, our results clearly confirm the adaptation of this population to the atypical thermal habitat, characterised by an annual mean water temperature value of 13.32 ±0.08 °C. Maximum gonadal development was reached in August, with maximum GSI median value of 0.64 (instead of reported values even 10 times higher for other populations), and ovigerous females were found in autumn, with mean realized fecundity of 35 ±7 compared to 285–995 reported from other habitats. Histological analysis was consistent with other studies and allowed us to follow ovarian development at cytological level. The importance of all these results is not to be underestimated: to our knowledge these findings are the first report of the coolest habitat successfully colonized by this species at the present time and so they have to be taken as a warning about the possible range expansion of P. clarkii also to northern and colder habitats that have few things in common with the native habitat of the species and, up to now, were considered “safe” from the invasion of the red swamp crayfish.

Details

ISSN :
18185487
Volume :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Aquatic Invasions
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....07db3775bbec3ccf598baad40ef988dd
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3391/ai.2015.10.2.08