Life-history traits of alvinocaridid shrimps inhabiting chemosynthetic ecosystems around Japan
Life-history traits of alvinocaridid shrimps inhabiting chemosynthetic ecosystems around Japan
Alvinocaridid shrimps are endemic and globally widespread in chemosynthetic ecosystems such as hydrothermal vents and hydrocarbon seeps. Though the biology of Atlantic alvinocaridid species have received considerable attention, little is known about their Pacific relatives. Here we described population structures and reproductive biology of three Pacific alvinocaridid species—Shinkaicaris leurokolos, Opaepele loihi, Alvinocaris longirostris—with notes on a fourth species—A. dissimilis—from several chemosynthetic ecosystems around Japan and compared their size frequency distributions and reproductive outputs. We showed that population demographics differ among these species, including a significantly larger proportion of juveniles in O. loihi and spatial variation of sex ratio in S. leurokolos, but all shared sex ratios biased toward females. The three shrimp species were characterized by relatively small sizes at onset of maturity, although this varied among sites for A. longirostris. Overall, size-specific fecundities and egg volumes of A. longirostris, O. loihi and S. leurokolos were in a similar range to Atlantic alvinocaridids. In addition, we performed egg incubation experiments of O. loihi under different temperature conditions to characterize thermal physiology during its brooding period. This confirmed a strong influence of temperature on both brooding duration and hatching rate, with a thermal preference that differs from previously published data for A. longirostris and S. leurokolos. Finally, our results indicated that these alvinocaridid species from the northwestern Pacific likely differ in reproductive timing, either through distinct brooding durations and/or distinct brooding periodicity, although further investigations are required to confirm these patterns.
crustacean, deep sea, hydrocarbon seep, hydrothermal vent, life cycle, reproduction, Hydrothermal vent, Hydrocarbon seep, Life cycle, Deep sea, Reproduction, Crustacean
Methou, Pierre
dbd1cacc-e548-41c1-a33f-77ac83eca374
Nye, Verity
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Copley, Jon
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Watanabe, Hiromi Kayama
60f558d9-2bdf-4f8d-87b2-10792bba5d71
Nagai, Yukiko
a837897a-19f1-4ab8-8c26-13b079318d09
Chen, Chong
3faad3e1-b898-4f4b-b418-9c1736e53f95
June 2023
Methou, Pierre
dbd1cacc-e548-41c1-a33f-77ac83eca374
Nye, Verity
e3688d01-623f-47b5-9a4c-7e49b16aa5a8
Copley, Jon
5f30e2a6-76c1-4150-9a42-dcfb8f5788ef
Watanabe, Hiromi Kayama
60f558d9-2bdf-4f8d-87b2-10792bba5d71
Nagai, Yukiko
a837897a-19f1-4ab8-8c26-13b079318d09
Chen, Chong
3faad3e1-b898-4f4b-b418-9c1736e53f95
Methou, Pierre, Nye, Verity, Copley, Jon, Watanabe, Hiromi Kayama, Nagai, Yukiko and Chen, Chong
(2023)
Life-history traits of alvinocaridid shrimps inhabiting chemosynthetic ecosystems around Japan.
Marine Biology, 170 (6), [75].
(doi:10.1007/s00227-023-04221-4).
Abstract
Alvinocaridid shrimps are endemic and globally widespread in chemosynthetic ecosystems such as hydrothermal vents and hydrocarbon seeps. Though the biology of Atlantic alvinocaridid species have received considerable attention, little is known about their Pacific relatives. Here we described population structures and reproductive biology of three Pacific alvinocaridid species—Shinkaicaris leurokolos, Opaepele loihi, Alvinocaris longirostris—with notes on a fourth species—A. dissimilis—from several chemosynthetic ecosystems around Japan and compared their size frequency distributions and reproductive outputs. We showed that population demographics differ among these species, including a significantly larger proportion of juveniles in O. loihi and spatial variation of sex ratio in S. leurokolos, but all shared sex ratios biased toward females. The three shrimp species were characterized by relatively small sizes at onset of maturity, although this varied among sites for A. longirostris. Overall, size-specific fecundities and egg volumes of A. longirostris, O. loihi and S. leurokolos were in a similar range to Atlantic alvinocaridids. In addition, we performed egg incubation experiments of O. loihi under different temperature conditions to characterize thermal physiology during its brooding period. This confirmed a strong influence of temperature on both brooding duration and hatching rate, with a thermal preference that differs from previously published data for A. longirostris and S. leurokolos. Finally, our results indicated that these alvinocaridid species from the northwestern Pacific likely differ in reproductive timing, either through distinct brooding durations and/or distinct brooding periodicity, although further investigations are required to confirm these patterns.
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Accepted/In Press date: 25 April 2023
Published date: June 2023
Additional Information:
Funding Information:
PM was supported by a JAMSTEC Young Research Fellow fellowship. CC and HKW were supported by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (KAKENHI) from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS), grant code 18K06401.
We thank the captains and crews of numerous research cruises conducted on-board R/V Kairei (KR15-16, KR15-17, KR16-16), R/V Natsushima (NT05-05, NT10-17, NT13-22, NT15-13), R/V Kaiyo (KY14-01), R/V Yokosuka (YK17-17, YK19-10, YK22-05), and R/V Shinsei-Maru (KS-21-20, KS-22-2). We also thank the pilots and the operation team of the HOV Shinkai 6500 and of the ROVs Kaiko , Hyper-Dolphin , and KM-ROV during these research cruises. We gratefully acknowledge the chief scientists of the relevant expeditions: Shinsuke Kawagucci (JAMSTEC; NT10-17, KR15-16), Hironori Komatsu (National Museum of Nature and Science, Tsukuba; KS-22-2), Hiroko Makita (JAMSTEC and Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology; YK17-17), Junichi Miyazaki (JAMSTEC; KR16-16), Tatsuo Nozaki (JAMSTEC; KS-21-20), Ken Takai (JAMSTEC; NT15-13, KY14-01, YK19-10, YK22-05), Hiroyuki Yamamoto (JAMSTEC; NT13-22, KR15-17).
Keywords:
crustacean, deep sea, hydrocarbon seep, hydrothermal vent, life cycle, reproduction, Hydrothermal vent, Hydrocarbon seep, Life cycle, Deep sea, Reproduction, Crustacean
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 477212
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/477212
ISSN: 0025-3162
PURE UUID: 4e5d3b9b-ccb8-4e14-a484-70fc0d21d047
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Date deposited: 01 Jun 2023 16:44
Last modified: 25 Apr 2024 04:01
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Contributors
Author:
Pierre Methou
Author:
Verity Nye
Author:
Hiromi Kayama Watanabe
Author:
Yukiko Nagai
Author:
Chong Chen
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