JOURNAL OF CRUSTACEAN BIOLOGY, 26(4): 495–502, 2006 TIMING AND DURATION OF LARVAL HATCHING FOR BLUE KING CRAB

the Kodiak Fisheries Research Center. Crabs were held in chilled seawater at 2, 3.5, or 48C until hatching, and final counts were 4, 6, and 10 crabs in each treatment, respectively. Mean size of all crabs was 123.9 mm CL and did not differ significantly between treatments. Individual crabs required...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bradley G. Stevens
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
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Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.533.3637
http://doc.nprb.org/web/publication/project_0507_stevens_jcb_2006.pdf
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Summary:the Kodiak Fisheries Research Center. Crabs were held in chilled seawater at 2, 3.5, or 48C until hatching, and final counts were 4, 6, and 10 crabs in each treatment, respectively. Mean size of all crabs was 123.9 mm CL and did not differ significantly between treatments. Individual crabs required an average of 29 days for complete hatching, regardless of holding temperature. Earliest hatching began on or before 20 February 2004. Crabs captured in July and held at 48C hatched significantly earlier, with a mean hatch date of 13 March 2004, than crabs captured in October and held at 28C or 3.58C, both of which groups hatched on a mean date of 18 April 2004. Crabs released an average of 416 ml of larvae, and 110,033 first stage zoeae. Excluding two crabs for which complete volumes were not obtained, there were no differences in volume or number of larvae released by crabs held at different temperatures. The pattern, duration and timing of larval release exhibited by blue king crab is similar to that observed for other lithodid crabs including red king crab (P. camtschaticus), golden king crab (Lithodes aequispinus), and southern king crab (L. santolla). Extended hatching periods for king crabs may be an adaptation to environmental variability and the uncertainty of adequate food sources for larvae, and represent a reproductive strategy of diversified bet-hedging.