Seasonal variation of male-type antennular setation in female Calanus finmarchicus

Female calanoid copepods of the family Calanidae can mature with either the juvenile and most typical female pattern of setation, termed trithek (T), or with the male pattern, termed quadrithek (Q). It was suggested by Fleminger (1985), but not proved, that females with the Q pattern have switched f...

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Main Authors: Miller, Charles B., Crain, Jennifer A., Marcus, Nancy H.
Other Authors: College of Oceanic and Atmospheric Sciences
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
unknown
Published: Inter Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/v405sb99h
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spelling ftoregonstate:ir.library.oregonstate.edu:v405sb99h 2024-04-14T08:10:01+00:00 Seasonal variation of male-type antennular setation in female Calanus finmarchicus Miller, Charles B. Crain, Jennifer A. Marcus, Nancy H. College of Oceanic and Atmospheric Sciences https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/v405sb99h English [eng] eng unknown Inter Research https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/v405sb99h Copyright Not Evaluated Article ftoregonstate 2024-03-21T15:51:03Z Female calanoid copepods of the family Calanidae can mature with either the juvenile and most typical female pattern of setation, termed trithek (T), or with the male pattern, termed quadrithek (Q). It was suggested by Fleminger (1985), but not proved, that females with the Q pattern have switched from development as males to development as females after initiation of seta formation prior to the maturation molt. Such switching, if it occurs, has population dynamical consequences. Therefore, we determined the fractions of Q females in the population of Calanus finmarchicus from Georges Bank and nearby deeper water during each month of the animals’ growing season, January through July of 1995. Based on >780 individuals examined from each month, the fraction of Q individuals was ~20% in January, decreased to 8.5% in April, rose to 12.5% in June and was 9% in July. This suggests that the individuals of the several seasonal generations select reproduction as females (or conversely as males) at different rates. Smaller samples from January, April and June of 1996 showed the same pattern. A similar study in a northern Norwegian fjord with 1 annual generation (Svensen & Tande 1999) showed 38% Q females in February, early in maturation, and 25% Q in March. If proportions of individuals selecting male or female reproduction are somehow optimized in response to habitat circumstances, then variation in fraction of Q females implies that the optimum is different in different seasons and latitudes. It remains to explain the implied differences in the reproductive value (in the sense established by Fisher 1930) of female versus male reproduction in Calanus. Keywords: Antennules, Sex determination, Calanus finmarchicus, Georges Bank, Copepod Keywords: Antennules, Sex determination, Calanus finmarchicus, Georges Bank, Copepod Article in Journal/Newspaper Calanus finmarchicus Copepods ScholarsArchive@OSU (Oregon State University) Seta ENVELOPE(9.895,9.895,63.645,63.645)
institution Open Polar
collection ScholarsArchive@OSU (Oregon State University)
op_collection_id ftoregonstate
language English
unknown
description Female calanoid copepods of the family Calanidae can mature with either the juvenile and most typical female pattern of setation, termed trithek (T), or with the male pattern, termed quadrithek (Q). It was suggested by Fleminger (1985), but not proved, that females with the Q pattern have switched from development as males to development as females after initiation of seta formation prior to the maturation molt. Such switching, if it occurs, has population dynamical consequences. Therefore, we determined the fractions of Q females in the population of Calanus finmarchicus from Georges Bank and nearby deeper water during each month of the animals’ growing season, January through July of 1995. Based on >780 individuals examined from each month, the fraction of Q individuals was ~20% in January, decreased to 8.5% in April, rose to 12.5% in June and was 9% in July. This suggests that the individuals of the several seasonal generations select reproduction as females (or conversely as males) at different rates. Smaller samples from January, April and June of 1996 showed the same pattern. A similar study in a northern Norwegian fjord with 1 annual generation (Svensen & Tande 1999) showed 38% Q females in February, early in maturation, and 25% Q in March. If proportions of individuals selecting male or female reproduction are somehow optimized in response to habitat circumstances, then variation in fraction of Q females implies that the optimum is different in different seasons and latitudes. It remains to explain the implied differences in the reproductive value (in the sense established by Fisher 1930) of female versus male reproduction in Calanus. Keywords: Antennules, Sex determination, Calanus finmarchicus, Georges Bank, Copepod Keywords: Antennules, Sex determination, Calanus finmarchicus, Georges Bank, Copepod
author2 College of Oceanic and Atmospheric Sciences
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Miller, Charles B.
Crain, Jennifer A.
Marcus, Nancy H.
spellingShingle Miller, Charles B.
Crain, Jennifer A.
Marcus, Nancy H.
Seasonal variation of male-type antennular setation in female Calanus finmarchicus
author_facet Miller, Charles B.
Crain, Jennifer A.
Marcus, Nancy H.
author_sort Miller, Charles B.
title Seasonal variation of male-type antennular setation in female Calanus finmarchicus
title_short Seasonal variation of male-type antennular setation in female Calanus finmarchicus
title_full Seasonal variation of male-type antennular setation in female Calanus finmarchicus
title_fullStr Seasonal variation of male-type antennular setation in female Calanus finmarchicus
title_full_unstemmed Seasonal variation of male-type antennular setation in female Calanus finmarchicus
title_sort seasonal variation of male-type antennular setation in female calanus finmarchicus
publisher Inter Research
url https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/v405sb99h
long_lat ENVELOPE(9.895,9.895,63.645,63.645)
geographic Seta
geographic_facet Seta
genre Calanus finmarchicus
Copepods
genre_facet Calanus finmarchicus
Copepods
op_relation https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/v405sb99h
op_rights Copyright Not Evaluated
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