scholarly journals Rasping patterns of the high-shore limpet Cellana grata

2014 ◽  
Vol 80 (4) ◽  
pp. 456-459 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicholas P. Burnett ◽  
Karen A. Villarta ◽  
Gray A. Williams
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Jennifer Vander Veur

<p>Determining the magnitude of dispersal and connectivity between populations has important implications for marine conservation. Species with limited dispersal capabilities exhibit restricted gene flow leading to isolation and, ultimately, differentiated populations. In this ecological study I investigated the gastropods Austrolittorina antipodum (Philippi, 1847) and Austrolittorina cincta (Quoy and Gaimard, 1833) to determine how ecology and behaviour influence the dispersal and connectivity of these species. The aim of this study was to determine population size and structure, settlement, fecundity, and adult movement rates. Methodologies included: population surveys, deployment of settlement pads and adult density manipulations, dissections, and a tagging study. These elements of a species ecology and behaviour can enhance or restrict population connectivity by: cohort partitioning resulting from habitat requirements, fluctuating settlement due to variable larval mortality or adult densities impacting dispersal, skewed sex ratios and effective populations sizes altering larval production, and adult movement leading to behavioural isolation or facilitating gene flow, along with other possible effects. Population surveys revealed both species had a Vermeij (1972) "type 1 distribution" (shell size increasing from the low to high shore), with the highest density of individuals on the low shore and the majority of mature adults on the high shore. Overall, A. antipodum was 16 times more abundant than A. cincta. Shifts to a smaller mean size of both species, along all shore heights following periods of peak settlement indicates settlers are potentially triggering competitive interactions or ontogenetic migrations in other cohorts.Settlement surveys revealed that peak settlement for Austrolittorina spp. was from February to April, declining at the beginning of March. Multiple peaks in settlement may act as a buffer limiting the potential of stochastic events to hinder dispersal during reproductive seasons. Settlement rates were not affected by adult density in control treatments; however, settlement was higher on pads deployed within adult populations compared to pads deployed adjacent to adult populations, suggesting the presences of adults has some effect on settlement. Fecundity results revealed A. antipodum to have more mature females than A. cincta, with males of both species reaching sexual maturity before females. Sex ratios of both species were skewed towards more females, with effective population sizes that included approximately 88% of each species population. A. antipodum’s larger population may be due to variation between the species' demographics, such as the distribution of mature females and juveniles leading to greater spawning success and juvenile survivorship. Tagging transplant/translocation experiments used to examine movement revealed that both species traveled similar distances. On average A. antipodum traveled 24.1m (±23.5m) and A. cincta traveled 18.7m (±16m) in eight months. There was no evidence of behavioural isolation occurring between low and high shore individuals. The wide ranging movements of adults indicated adults have the potential to maintain population connectivity on small scales. The findings of this study suggest both species facilitate dispersal with multiple peaks in settlement, large effective populations, and high adult mobility. Behavioural variation between the species appears to affect population connectivity, with the distribution of A. antipodum demographics potentially enhancing connectivity.</p>


Author(s):  
K. Johannesson ◽  
B. Johannesson

In a short communication Grahame et al. (1992) argue against our finding that Littorina neglecta Bean is an ecotype of Littorina saxatilis (Olivi) rather than a separate species (Johannesson & Johannesson, 1990b). Unfortunately, Grahame et al. (1992) have miss-represented our earlier paper, and we feel the need to refute their arguments.In populations from north-western Europe we studied morphological characters used to separate Littorina neglecta from L. saxatilis. We found that intermediate shapes were common and, furthermore, we found no close coupling among characters used to define L. neglecta (Johannesson & Johannesson, 1990a). We further analysed the genetic variation in five strongly polymorphic allozyme loci. In four loci we found a pattern that indicated that L. neglecta is not reproductively isolated from L. saxatilis. In the fifth locus, Aat-1, we found consistent differences between populations of L. neglecta (from the low shore) and L. saxatilis (from the high shore). Similar differences were observed between low and high shore populations in Sweden where, however, no snails of neglecta-type were present.


Author(s):  
G. S. Preece

High- and low-shore populations of Bathyporeia pilosa LindstrÖm, kept in the laboratory under natural day-night illumination and constant dark conditions, show distinct swimming rhythms of tidal frequency (12–4 h) with activity maxima on the early ebb tide. A diurnal component is evident, activity during thenight being greater than during the day. The tidal rhythm deteriorates under laboratory conditions, but swimming activity recurs after a semi-lunar period. Under natural illumination, both populations show a night tide swimming rhythm of semi-lunar frequency, activity occurring mainly over the 'falling' spring tides. Plankton sampling on night tides over the area of the beach occupied by high-shore B. pilosa shows that the animals emerge and swim on ebb tides which are in phase with darkness. The importance of exogenous factors such as wave action, pressure, temperature and light is discussed. Ecological implications and the possible function of the swimming rhythm are considered.


Author(s):  
John I. Spicer ◽  
David Morritt ◽  
Alan C. Taylor

The common sandhopper of European shores, Talitrus saltator (Montagu, 1808) (Crustacea: Amphipoda) remains inactive in high shore burrows for much of the winter in more northern latitudes. In the laboratory exposure to low temperature (2 or 3°C) was accompanied by the onset of inactivity, a precipitous decrease in oxygen uptake and a marked increase in the concentrations of the major ions in the haemolymph. The increase in the concentration of Mg2+ in the haemolymph was particularly pronounced. The possibility that Mg2+ ions are implicated in bringing about a reduction in activity and oxygen uptake is discussed.


Author(s):  
Colin Little ◽  
Julian C. Partridge ◽  
Linda Teagle

Activity of Patella vulgata was monitored in the asymmetrical tidal regime of an Irish sealough, Lough Hyne, and also outside the lough in a normal tidal regime. An automated method was used, allowing continuous records to be made over two weeks. Most activity occurred at night while the limpets were emersed. Rainfall depressed activity. There was little activity during daytime emersion, contrary to the results of previous studies in which low-shore limpets foraged diurnally as well as nocturnally. Timing of activity in relation to tidal coverage was similar inside the lough and outside.Activity of high-shore limpets within the lough was greater at spring tides than at neaps, but that of low-shore limpets was greater at neaps. Outside the lough, both high-shore and low-shore limpets showed greater activity at spring tides. Reasons for the differences are discussed.Using Maximum Entropy Spectral Analysis, three periodicities underlying limpet activity were indicated. These were at h, 124 h and 8–2 h. When limpet activity was simulated by adding three sine waves of appropriate periodicity, rhythms very similar to those recorded from the shore were produced.


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