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Long-term interannual cycles of the gametogenic ecology of the Antarctic brittle star Ophionotus victoriae

Long-term interannual cycles of the gametogenic ecology of the Antarctic brittle star Ophionotus victoriae
Long-term interannual cycles of the gametogenic ecology of the Antarctic brittle star Ophionotus victoriae
Spermatogenesis, oogenesis and fecundity are described and the gonad index calculated for 10 individuals from each month using histological and image analysis techniques for the Antarctic brittle star Ophionotus victoriae (Bell 1902). Individuals were collected between September 1997 and December 2000 from a shallow water population (15 to 20 m) on the west of the Antarctic Peninsula. Both male and female gonad index varied seasonally, where proportions of large oocytes and mature sperm decreased markedly between November and December of each year, indicating the spawning period. Although the annual timing of reproduction was consistent among years, O. victoriae displayed considerable inter-annual variation in reproductive effort. This variability was notable in the gonad and gut index of both males and females and in female fecundity, which showed no discernible change in some years, but varied more than an order of magnitude in others.

We identify 3 main aspects to the reproductive ecology of O. victoriae: (1) spawning was synchronous and annually consistent; (2) long periods were required for gamete development, with oocytes requiring ~18 to 24 mo to mature; (3) there was clear inter-annual variability in reproductive effort and nutritional condition, which could be associated with the extent of the preceding organic sedimentation event. Subsidiary effects may also have been felt from the seasonal ice profile and temperature signal. A combination of all or some of these patterns may be an adaptation to the distinct seasonality and low level resource supply characteristic of the Antarctic and the long-term cycles intrinsic in polar environmental variables.
inter-annual variation, reproductive effort, sedimentation events, antarctica, ophionotus victoriae
0171-8630
141-155
Grange, Laura J.
8de65684-8e14-4cc2-89d1-ca20322714e4
Tyler, Paul A.
d1965388-38cc-4c1d-9217-d59dba4dd7f8
Peck, Lloyd S.
097d27ed-4644-4bc1-a855-045029ace2df
Cornelius, Nils
71c6c3f0-d51a-4225-b9c2-d70106683765
Grange, Laura J.
8de65684-8e14-4cc2-89d1-ca20322714e4
Tyler, Paul A.
d1965388-38cc-4c1d-9217-d59dba4dd7f8
Peck, Lloyd S.
097d27ed-4644-4bc1-a855-045029ace2df
Cornelius, Nils
71c6c3f0-d51a-4225-b9c2-d70106683765

Grange, Laura J., Tyler, Paul A., Peck, Lloyd S. and Cornelius, Nils (2004) Long-term interannual cycles of the gametogenic ecology of the Antarctic brittle star Ophionotus victoriae. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 278, 141-155. (doi:10.3354/meps278141).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Spermatogenesis, oogenesis and fecundity are described and the gonad index calculated for 10 individuals from each month using histological and image analysis techniques for the Antarctic brittle star Ophionotus victoriae (Bell 1902). Individuals were collected between September 1997 and December 2000 from a shallow water population (15 to 20 m) on the west of the Antarctic Peninsula. Both male and female gonad index varied seasonally, where proportions of large oocytes and mature sperm decreased markedly between November and December of each year, indicating the spawning period. Although the annual timing of reproduction was consistent among years, O. victoriae displayed considerable inter-annual variation in reproductive effort. This variability was notable in the gonad and gut index of both males and females and in female fecundity, which showed no discernible change in some years, but varied more than an order of magnitude in others.

We identify 3 main aspects to the reproductive ecology of O. victoriae: (1) spawning was synchronous and annually consistent; (2) long periods were required for gamete development, with oocytes requiring ~18 to 24 mo to mature; (3) there was clear inter-annual variability in reproductive effort and nutritional condition, which could be associated with the extent of the preceding organic sedimentation event. Subsidiary effects may also have been felt from the seasonal ice profile and temperature signal. A combination of all or some of these patterns may be an adaptation to the distinct seasonality and low level resource supply characteristic of the Antarctic and the long-term cycles intrinsic in polar environmental variables.

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Published date: 7 September 2004
Keywords: inter-annual variation, reproductive effort, sedimentation events, antarctica, ophionotus victoriae

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 13564
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/13564
ISSN: 0171-8630
PURE UUID: e13e8fec-c3f1-41a8-a1fb-ffe6d88e8c25
ORCID for Laura J. Grange: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9222-6848

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Date deposited: 10 Dec 2004
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 05:08

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Contributors

Author: Laura J. Grange ORCID iD
Author: Paul A. Tyler
Author: Lloyd S. Peck
Author: Nils Cornelius

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