Life history of Mysis stenolepis Smith (Crustacea, Mysidacea)

1975 ◽  
Vol 53 (7) ◽  
pp. 942-952 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Amaratunga ◽  
S. Corey

A 17-month field study showed that Mysis stenolepis in Passamaquoddy Bay, New Brunswick lives for about 1 year. Young are released in shallow water early in spring and grow rapidly during the summer. In the fall, young adults migrate to deeper water where they reach sexual maturity. Transfer of sperm lakes place during winter in deeper regions of the Bay. soon after which the males die. Females survive and in spring migrate to shallow waters to release young after which they die. Females breed once and carry an average of 157 young per brood. Developmental stages of the postmarsupial young are described and discussed.

1976 ◽  
Vol 54 (5) ◽  
pp. 615-619 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susan Corey

Diastylis sculpta was collected from shallow water (1–15 m) in Passamaquoddy Bay over a 26-month period. D. sculpta produces a rapidly growing and developing summer generation between two successive winter generations. The overwintering generation releases young in mid-July and late August. The summer generation releases young in November. The mean fecundity of the summer-gravid females (78.4) is much greater than the mean fecundity (20.0) of the fall-gravid females. The maximum life-span is 5 months and 12 months for members of the summer and winter generations respectively.


1974 ◽  
Vol 52 (4) ◽  
pp. 495-505 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. W. Hollingshead ◽  
S. Corey

Monthly collections of Meganyctiphanes norvegica for a 19-monih period in Passamaquoddy Bay showed that these euphausiids were present in the bay in varying numbers from February to November but virtually disappeared in December and January. Sexual maturity is attained in 1 year with gonadal development taking 3 months, and spawning occurring in July and August. The resulting generation will breed and spawn for the first time the next July as age group I. Age group I grows from April until August; from September until March, very little growth occurs. After a second breeding and spawning, the animals die, having a life span of 2 years.


1983 ◽  
Vol 61 (1) ◽  
pp. 108-111 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Corey

Diastylis quadrispinosa inhabiting depths of 5–60 m in Passamaquoddy Bay breeds during late fall. Gravid females overwinter and release young during April to about mid-May. The life span is 5–6 months for males and 12–13 months for females. Females produce one brood with a mean fecundity of 67.2 (range, 26–149).


1974 ◽  
Vol 106 (8) ◽  
pp. 785-800 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. S. Olton ◽  
E. F. Legner

AbstractThe synonymy, distribution, host range, and life history of the gregarious larval–pupal parasitoid Tachinaephagus zealandicus Ashmead, is discussed. Laboratory studies of its biology were conducted at 25° ± 2 °C using Musca domestica L. as host. Its developmental stages are described. Under laboratory conditions its life cycle lasted 23–27 days. Parasitoid development accelerated with higher average densities per host. Single standardized hosts produced 3–18 adult parasitoids. Mated females provided with hosts lived 50.4–67.2 h. The average length of the reproductive period and number of hosts parasitized were independent of host density; however, the average number of eggs deposited per host increased at lower host densities. Adult emergence displayed circadian rhythmicity independent of photoperiod over 3+ days.


Parasitology ◽  
1930 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 505-509 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. C. Hentschel

1. In general there is a correlation between the life-history of Gonospora arenicolae and the sexual cycle of its host, Arenicola ecaudata, similar to that between G. varia and Audouinia tentaculata.2. In the species under consideration the correlation is not so definite and the life-history of a generation of parasites does not necessarily coincide with a sexual cycle of the host. This is complicated by the double annual spawning of the host.3. The formation of sporocysts is simultaneous with the sexual maturity of the worm.4. It is suggested that, as in Audouinia, a secretion produced by the gonads stimulates the development of the gregarine.5. The ejection of the sporocysts with the gametes was observed.6. It is suggested that phagocytosis may be the cause of the rupture of the gametocysts in this species.


During a short stay at Plymouth, in 1889, I was engaged in studying certain points in the anatomy of Cirripedia; finding, however, that a knowledge of the embryology was necessary in order to arrive at a complete understanding of the adult structure, I became wishful to investigate the life-history of some one member of the group. This I had an opportunity of doing at Naples, where I was appointed to occupy the Cambridge University Table at the Zoological Station for a period of six months, subsequently increased to nine. I here succeeded in obtaining a practically complete series of stages of Balanus perforatus , Bruguiere, as well as many stages in other members of the group. Though a number of able observers have occupied themselves with the embryology of Cirripedes, yet, owing to lack of opportunity, and to the difficulty of obtaining complete series of developmental stages, as well' as to the inherent difficulties in the subject, much remained to be done in this line. Willemoes-Suhm alone, with the advantages afforded by his position during the Challenger Expedition, has hitherto obtained a complete series of stages of any one form, but he failed to trace the history of the earlier stages, and in the later, limited himself to the appearance of fresh and spirit specimens, as seen without cutting sections. In fact the method of sections has been little applied to the development of Cirripedes, and not at all to the earlier stages. There is, therefore, little apology needed for an account embracing the results obtained by the employment of some of the more modern methods of embryological study.


1925 ◽  
Vol 44 ◽  
pp. 153-167
Author(s):  
David Ellis

The sulphur bacteria are found in shallow waters, both marine and fresh, and play an active part in the decomposition of animal and vegetable matter. They require for their full development an abundant supply of oxygen and of sulphuretted hydrogen. They do not thrive unless the water is periodically renewed, or else is so shallow that oxygen is obtainable to a fairly large extent from the atmosphere. When the oxygen is used up their development rapidly comes to an end, and in some cases, as is described below, the organisms disappear completely. They derive their supply of sulphuretted hydrogen from the decomposition of the protein molecule of vegetable and animal matter. Usually a growth of sulphur bacteria is visible to the naked eye as a greyish or reddish mantle covering the surface of a mass of decomposing organic matter. If, for some reason or other, the supply of oxygen is not plentiful at the bottom of the pool, the mass of growth leaves the surface of the decomposing matter and moves nearer the surface of the water.


1945 ◽  
Vol 23d (5) ◽  
pp. 117-127 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard B. Miller

Triaenophorus stizostedionis is a pseudophyllidean cestode that occurs as an adult in the intestine of the pike-perch, Stizostedion vitreum. It differs from T. crassus and T. nodulosus in several morphological characters but particularly in the shape of the scolex hooks and the size and disposition of the male genitalia. Sexual maturity is attained in the spring; spawning and death take place during the first two weeks of June. The eggs average 56 μ long by 40 μ wide. The coracidia average 73 by 71 μ. The procercoid develops in the copepod, Cyclops bicuspidatus, in from 10 days to two weeks. When fully grown it reaches 220 μ. The plerocercoids occur encysted on the visceral and parietal peritoneum of the trout-perch, Percopsis omiscomaycus. The life history is completed when an infested trout-perch is swallowed by a pike-perch.


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