A comparative analysis of canyon and non-canyon populations of the deep-sea scavenging amphipod Paralicella caperesca
A comparative analysis of canyon and non-canyon populations of the deep-sea scavenging amphipod Paralicella caperesca
Existing population studies of deep-sea amphipods have focused on species that inhabit deep-sea vent or trench environments but few cosmopolitan species have been studied. Here we provide new insight into the life history and population ecology of the pan-oceanic scavenging amphipod Paralicella caperesca and discuss the influence of nutrient-rich submarine canyon environments on the growth and reproduction of this species. Data were collected through the dissection and measurement of 2997 P. caperesca from 14 samples taken from abyssal plains, continental slopes and submarine canyons in the North-East Atlantic. Sexual dimorphism was less pronounced than observed for other scavenging amphipod species but females were significantly larger and had shorter antennae than males. The size of oostegites in female P. caperesca varied considerably within size classes, ovaries contained a relatively large number of oocytes, and no empty ovaries were observed. These factors, in combination with absence of mature females, suggest that P. caperesca practices semelparity, a reproductive strategy that complements the feeding strategy of this obligate necrophage. Five male and seven female size-grouped cohorts were identified for P. caperesca. Cohorts from deep-sea submarine canyon populations showed consistently larger mean total body lengths than non-canyon cohorts. Individuals from canyon samples also expressed sexual characteristics at smaller sizes than non-canyon individuals. We hypothesize that these trends are indicative of nutrient-mediated growth, maturation, and reproduction in P. caperesca. The species is able to grow and reproduce relatively quickly in response to increased nutrient input in canyon environments and therefore dominates scavenging amphipod assemblages.
Amphipoda, abyssal, Atlantic Ocean, deep sea, necrophage, nutrient-mediated growth, semelparity
1687-1699
Duffy, Grant A.
e040b78b-5516-46b3-899a-4a275d91f134
Gutteridge, Zoe R.S.
aef454db-35b7-4c8d-90ef-773fc1991a69
Thurston, Michael H.
f23a596e-f311-4ca9-87d5-c1c56730eb19
Horton, Tammy
c4b41665-f0bc-4f0f-a7af-b2b9afc02e34
December 2016
Duffy, Grant A.
e040b78b-5516-46b3-899a-4a275d91f134
Gutteridge, Zoe R.S.
aef454db-35b7-4c8d-90ef-773fc1991a69
Thurston, Michael H.
f23a596e-f311-4ca9-87d5-c1c56730eb19
Horton, Tammy
c4b41665-f0bc-4f0f-a7af-b2b9afc02e34
Duffy, Grant A., Gutteridge, Zoe R.S., Thurston, Michael H. and Horton, Tammy
(2016)
A comparative analysis of canyon and non-canyon populations of the deep-sea scavenging amphipod Paralicella caperesca.
Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 96 (8), .
(doi:10.1017/S0025315415002064).
Abstract
Existing population studies of deep-sea amphipods have focused on species that inhabit deep-sea vent or trench environments but few cosmopolitan species have been studied. Here we provide new insight into the life history and population ecology of the pan-oceanic scavenging amphipod Paralicella caperesca and discuss the influence of nutrient-rich submarine canyon environments on the growth and reproduction of this species. Data were collected through the dissection and measurement of 2997 P. caperesca from 14 samples taken from abyssal plains, continental slopes and submarine canyons in the North-East Atlantic. Sexual dimorphism was less pronounced than observed for other scavenging amphipod species but females were significantly larger and had shorter antennae than males. The size of oostegites in female P. caperesca varied considerably within size classes, ovaries contained a relatively large number of oocytes, and no empty ovaries were observed. These factors, in combination with absence of mature females, suggest that P. caperesca practices semelparity, a reproductive strategy that complements the feeding strategy of this obligate necrophage. Five male and seven female size-grouped cohorts were identified for P. caperesca. Cohorts from deep-sea submarine canyon populations showed consistently larger mean total body lengths than non-canyon cohorts. Individuals from canyon samples also expressed sexual characteristics at smaller sizes than non-canyon individuals. We hypothesize that these trends are indicative of nutrient-mediated growth, maturation, and reproduction in P. caperesca. The species is able to grow and reproduce relatively quickly in response to increased nutrient input in canyon environments and therefore dominates scavenging amphipod assemblages.
Text
Duffy_et_al_Paralicella populaton_REVISED_JMBA.docx
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
e-pub ahead of print date: 21 December 2015
Published date: December 2016
Keywords:
Amphipoda, abyssal, Atlantic Ocean, deep sea, necrophage, nutrient-mediated growth, semelparity
Organisations:
Marine Biogeochemistry
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 403895
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/403895
ISSN: 0025-3154
PURE UUID: f9f62bdd-b1c0-486b-954c-f23a83f62d4d
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Date deposited: 14 Dec 2016 16:51
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 06:09
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Contributors
Author:
Grant A. Duffy
Author:
Zoe R.S. Gutteridge
Author:
Michael H. Thurston
Author:
Tammy Horton
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