Developmental trade-offs in Subantarctic meroplankton communities and the enigma of low decapod diversity in high southern latitudes

Developmental modes, occurrence and distribution patterns of invertebrate larvae were studied in the Subantarctic Magellan region of South America on the basis of quantitative plankton hauls obtained during the "Victor Hensen" campaign in November 1994. The meroplankton community was found...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Thatje, S., Schiel, Sigrid, Arntz, Wolf
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/9048/
https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/9048/1/Tha2003g.pdf
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.19563
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.19563.d001
Description
Summary:Developmental modes, occurrence and distribution patterns of invertebrate larvae were studied in the Subantarctic Magellan region of South America on the basis of quantitative plankton hauls obtained during the "Victor Hensen" campaign in November 1994. The meroplankton community was found to be numerically dominated by decapod crustacean larvae (47 %), followed by polychaetes (20 %), echinoderms (16 %), cirripedes (8 %) and molluscs (7 %). A rich decapod community was detected, with 2 thalassinid, 5 brachyuran, 4 anomuran, 6 caridean, one astacid and one palinurid species/morphotypes identified. Cluster analyses clearly distinguished deep-water stations (250-400 m) south of the Straits of Magellan from shallow-water stations (30-100 m) in the Beagle Channel, where meroplankton was dominated by decapod larvae (> 90 %). Three main larval developmental modes, characterised by morphogenesis, mode of larval nutrition, and site of larval development, were observed in Magellan decapods: (1) extended, planktotrophic development of planktonic larvae, (2) abbreviated, planktotrophic development of planktonic larvae, and (3) abbreviated, endotrophic (lecithotrophic) development of demersally living larvae. Several caridean shrimps with abbreviated larval development, which have congeners in the Antarctic, suggest a strong synchronisation between abbreviated planktotrophic larval development and short periods of primary production. This seems to be an essential factor in early life history adaptation for the colonisation of the Antarctic environment. The impoverished Antarctic decapod fauna, with only a few representatives of caridean shrimp species left, is discussed to be related to the lack in flexibility of reptant decapods in distributing energy resources between adults and their offspring, allowing abbreviated planktotrophic larval development.