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In hot and cold water: differential life-history adaptations are key to success in contrasting thermal deep-sea environments

In hot and cold water: differential life-history adaptations are key to success in contrasting thermal deep-sea environments
In hot and cold water: differential life-history adaptations are key to success in contrasting thermal deep-sea environments
1.Few species of reptant decapod crustaceans thrive in the cold-stenothermal waters of the Southern Ocean. However, abundant populations of a new species of anomuran crab, Kiwa tyleri, occur at hydrothermal vent fields on the East Scotia Ridge.
2.As a result of local thermal conditions at the vents, these crabs are not restricted by the physiological limits that otherwise exclude reptant decapods south of the polar front.
3.We reveal the adult life-history of this species by piecing together variation in microdistribution, body size-frequency, sex ratio, and ovarian and embryonic development, which indicates a pattern in the distribution of female Kiwaidae in relation to their reproductive development.
4.High-density "Kiwa" assemblages observed in close proximity to sources of vent fluids are constrained by the thermal limit of elevated temperatures and the availability of resources for chemosynthetic nutrition. Although adult Kiwaidae depend on epibiotic chemosynthetic bacteria for nutrition, females move offsite after extrusion of their eggs to protect brooding embryos from the chemically harsh, thermally fluctuating vent environment. Consequently, brooding females in the periphery of the vent field are in turn restricted by low-temperature physiological boundaries of the deep-water Southern Ocean environment. Females have a high reproductive investment in few, large, yolky eggs, facilitating full lecithotrophy, with the release of larvae prolonged, and asynchronous. After embryos are released, larvae are reliant on locating isolated active areas of hydrothermal flow in order to settle and survive as chemosynthetic adults. Where the cold water restricts the ability of all adult stages to migrate over long distances, these low temperatures may facilitate the larvae in the location of vent sites by extending the larval development period through hypometabolism.
5.These differential life-history adaptations to contrasting thermal environments lead to a disjunct life history among males and females of Kiwa tyleri, which is key to their success in the Southern Ocean vent environment.
6.We highlight the complexity in understanding the importance of life-history biology, in combination with environmental, ecological and physiological factors contributing to the overall global distribution of vent endemic species.
hydrothermal vent, invertebrate reproduction, life-history biology, remotely operated vehicle, Southern Ocean, thermal adaptation
0021-8790
898-913
Marsh, Leigh
b9d089aa-91e4-4a2e-b716-a7352616c6a2
Tyler, Paul
d1965388-38cc-4c1d-9217-d59dba4dd7f8
Copley, Jonathan
5f30e2a6-76c1-4150-9a42-dcfb8f5788ef
Thatje, Sven
f1011fe3-1048-40c0-97c1-e93b796e6533
Marsh, Leigh
b9d089aa-91e4-4a2e-b716-a7352616c6a2
Tyler, Paul
d1965388-38cc-4c1d-9217-d59dba4dd7f8
Copley, Jonathan
5f30e2a6-76c1-4150-9a42-dcfb8f5788ef
Thatje, Sven
f1011fe3-1048-40c0-97c1-e93b796e6533

Marsh, Leigh, Tyler, Paul, Copley, Jonathan and Thatje, Sven (2015) In hot and cold water: differential life-history adaptations are key to success in contrasting thermal deep-sea environments. Journal of Animal Ecology, 84 (4), 898-913. (doi:10.1111/1365-2656.12337).

Record type: Article

Abstract

1.Few species of reptant decapod crustaceans thrive in the cold-stenothermal waters of the Southern Ocean. However, abundant populations of a new species of anomuran crab, Kiwa tyleri, occur at hydrothermal vent fields on the East Scotia Ridge.
2.As a result of local thermal conditions at the vents, these crabs are not restricted by the physiological limits that otherwise exclude reptant decapods south of the polar front.
3.We reveal the adult life-history of this species by piecing together variation in microdistribution, body size-frequency, sex ratio, and ovarian and embryonic development, which indicates a pattern in the distribution of female Kiwaidae in relation to their reproductive development.
4.High-density "Kiwa" assemblages observed in close proximity to sources of vent fluids are constrained by the thermal limit of elevated temperatures and the availability of resources for chemosynthetic nutrition. Although adult Kiwaidae depend on epibiotic chemosynthetic bacteria for nutrition, females move offsite after extrusion of their eggs to protect brooding embryos from the chemically harsh, thermally fluctuating vent environment. Consequently, brooding females in the periphery of the vent field are in turn restricted by low-temperature physiological boundaries of the deep-water Southern Ocean environment. Females have a high reproductive investment in few, large, yolky eggs, facilitating full lecithotrophy, with the release of larvae prolonged, and asynchronous. After embryos are released, larvae are reliant on locating isolated active areas of hydrothermal flow in order to settle and survive as chemosynthetic adults. Where the cold water restricts the ability of all adult stages to migrate over long distances, these low temperatures may facilitate the larvae in the location of vent sites by extending the larval development period through hypometabolism.
5.These differential life-history adaptations to contrasting thermal environments lead to a disjunct life history among males and females of Kiwa tyleri, which is key to their success in the Southern Ocean vent environment.
6.We highlight the complexity in understanding the importance of life-history biology, in combination with environmental, ecological and physiological factors contributing to the overall global distribution of vent endemic species.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 2 March 2015
Published date: 1 July 2015
Keywords: hydrothermal vent, invertebrate reproduction, life-history biology, remotely operated vehicle, Southern Ocean, thermal adaptation
Organisations: Ocean and Earth Science

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 374229
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/374229
ISSN: 0021-8790
PURE UUID: 8c657cbc-05e3-473f-88b8-126dc8ead734
ORCID for Jonathan Copley: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3333-4325

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Date deposited: 09 Feb 2015 17:17
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:48

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Contributors

Author: Leigh Marsh
Author: Paul Tyler
Author: Jonathan Copley ORCID iD
Author: Sven Thatje

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