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  • 1. Granhag, Lena
    et al.
    Moller, Lene Friis
    Hansson, Lars J.
    SMHI, Research Department, Oceanography.
    Size-specific clearance rates of the ctenophore Mnemiopsis leidyi based on in situ gut content analyses2011In: Journal of Plankton Research, ISSN 0142-7873, E-ISSN 1464-3774, Vol. 33, no 7, p. 1043-1052Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    The ctenophore Mnemiopsis leidyi can consume large amounts of zooplankton prey. However, quantitative measurements of feeding rates, based on field data, are scarce. We measured the time required by the invasive M. leidyi to digest naturally occurring prey species in the Gullmar fjord, Sweden. Digestion times were related to prey size and type, number of prey in the gut and size of the predator. Large prey species or many prey in the gut resulted in longer digestion times compared with small or few prey, but digestion time also varied with the size of M. leidyi. The prey-and predator-specific digestion times were used together with in situ prey concentrations and gut contents of M. leidyi to calculate the clearance rates. Clearance rate as a function of ctenophore size is presented for the most abundant mesozooplankton: Acartia sp., Oithona sp., Oikopleura dioica and Penilia avirostris. On the basis of the relation between digestion time and the carbon content ratio between prey and predator, we discuss the possible effects of mixed prey assemblages on the estimates of clearance rates.

  • 2.
    Hansson, Lars J.
    et al.
    SMHI, Research Department, Oceanography.
    Hansson, Lars Johan
    SMHI.
    Craig, Sean F.
    Hughes, Roger N.
    Bishop, John D. D.
    Microscale genetic differentiation in a sessile invertebrate with cloned larvae: investigating the role of polyembryony2007In: Marine Biology, ISSN 0025-3162, E-ISSN 1432-1793, Vol. 153, no 1, p. 71-82Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    Microscale genetic differentiation of sessile organisms can arise from restricted dispersal of sexual propagules, leading to isolation by distance, or from localised cloning. Cyclostome bryozoans offer a possible combination of both: the localised transfer of spermatozoa between mates with limited dispersal of the resulting larvae, in association with the splitting of each sexually produced embryo into many clonal copies (polyembryony). We spatially sampled 157 colonies of Crisia denticulata from subtidal rock overhangs from one shore in Devon, England at a geographic scale of ca. 0.05 to 130 m plus a further 21 colonies from Pembrokeshire, Wales as an outgroup. Analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) revealed that the majority (67%) of genetic variation was distributed among individuals within single rock overhangs, with only 16% of variation among different overhangs within each shore and 17% of variation between the ingroup and outgroup shores. Despite local genetic variation, pairwise genetic similarity analysed by spatial autocorrelation was greatest at the smallest inter-individual distance we tested (5 cm) and remained significant and positive across generally within-overhang comparisons (< 4 m). Spatial autocorrelation and AMOVA analyses both indicated that patches of C. denticulata located on different rock overhangs tended to be genetically distinct, with the switch from positive to negative autocorrelation, which is often considered to be the distance within which individuals reproduce with their close relatives or the radius of a patch, occurring at the 4-8 m distance class. Rerunning analyses with twenty data sets that only included one individual of each multilocus genotype (n = 97) or the single data set that contained just the unique genotypes (n = 67) revealed that the presence of repeat genotypes had an impact on genetic structuring (PhiPT values were reduced when shared genotypes were removed from the dataset) but that it was not great and only statistically evident at distances between individuals of 1-2 m. Comparisons to a further 20 randomisations of the data set that were performed irrespective of genotype (n = 97) suggested that this conclusion is not an artefact of reduced sample size. A resampling procedure using kinship coefficients, implemented by the software package GENCLONE gave broadly similar results but the greater statistical power allowed small but significant impacts of repeat genotypes on genetic structure to be also detected at 0.125-0.5 and 4-16 m. Although we predict that a proportion of the repeat multilocus genotypes are shared by chance, such generally within-overhang distances may represent a common distance of cloned larval dispersal. These results suggests that closely situated potential mates include a significant proportion of the available genetic diversity within a population, making it unlikely that, as previously hypothesised, the potential disadvantage of producing clonal broods through polyembryony is offset by genetic uniformity within the mating neighbourhood. We also report an error in the published primer note of Craig et al. (Mol Ecol Notes 1:281-282, 2001): loci Cd5 and Cd6 appear to be the same microsatellite.

  • 3. Prendergast, Gabrielle S.
    et al.
    Zurn, Constanze M.
    Bers, A. Valeria
    Head, Ritchie M.
    Hansson, Lars J.
    SMHI, Research Department, Oceanography.
    Thomason, Jeremy C.
    Field-based video observations of wild barnacle cyprid behaviour in response to textural and chemical settlement cues2008In: Biofouling (Print), ISSN 0892-7014, E-ISSN 1029-2454, Vol. 24, no 6, p. 449-459Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    Many marine invertebrate larvae respond behaviourally to environmental settlement cues, yet behaviours are often only inferred from settlement patterns or are limited to laboratory studies. The behaviour of wild cypris larvae of Semibalanus balanoides L. was filmed on settlement tiles in the field. Tiles were of five different textures with a nested treatment of crude conspecific adult extract (AE). The effects of texture and AE on eleven defined behaviours were analysed. Texture affected the gross and net exploratory distances, velocity, acceleration and time spent exploring. AE attracted more cyprids during the first minute of immersion and increased the time spent on surfaces. Relatively few arrivals that either travel far and fast, or exit the surface rapidly, may indicate a lower chance of settlement. An increase in time spent on a surface may increase the probability of being in contact with the surface when the sign stimulus to settle occurs.

  • 4. Prendergast, Gabrielle S.
    et al.
    Zurn, Constanze M.
    Bers, A. Valeria
    Head, Ritchie M.
    Hansson, Lars J.
    SMHI, Research Department, Oceanography.
    Thomason, Jeremy C.
    The relative magnitude of the effects of biological and physical settlement cues for cypris larvae of the acorn barnacle, Semibalanus balanoides L.2009In: Biofouling (Print), ISSN 0892-7014, E-ISSN 1029-2454, Vol. 25, no 1, p. 35-44Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    Barnacle cypris larvae respond to many cues when selecting a settlement site. The settlement of over a million larvae on tiles of different textures, orientations and densities of incumbent settlers was measured on the rocky intertidal at Great Cumbrae, Scotland. Half of the tiles were replaced every tide whereas the others simultaneously accumulated settlers. Factor effects varied on each tide, and converged in the accumulating deployment. Increasing incumbent density led to net loss of settlement, which was less probable on the textures on which fastest settlment occurred ('very fine'), and more probable on those on which settlement was slowest ('smooth'). More settlement occurred on down-facing orientations during daylight and vice versa. Cue ranks were non-linear, so a path analysis model quantified the relative influence of each factor. Gregariousness was the most influential cue measured, although unmeasured factors had greater effects, highlighting the complexity of settlement influences in this species.

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