On reproductive strategies in adjacent lagoonal and intertidal-marine populations of the gastropodHydrobia ulvae
- 1 August 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom
- Vol. 68 (3) , 365-375
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0025315400043265
Abstract
The coastal prosobranchHydrobia ulvaeis known to occur in a wide range of marine and brackish habitats and to display great variation in its breeding and life-history characteristics. Several hypotheses have been advanced to account for the latter, including that the variation is environmentally induced and that the species can be divided into ecotypes. Comparison of two adjacent populations in Norfolk, U.K., one from the marine intertidal zone and the other from a non-tidal, landlocked, brackish coastal lagoon, however, disclosed that although shell form differed markedly (including a mean height ratio of 1:1.2), there was no difference in such otherwise variable features as numbers of eggs per capsule, size at hatching and larval type. In both, each capsule contained an average of 21-22 eggs, which hatched at a shell length of 152-154 μn to liberate relatyyively long-lived, free-swimming veligers. The two populations were also interfertile. In no respect had the isolated lagoonal population diverged away from the parent marine one towards the contrasting reproductive strategies characterizing the specifically lagoonal species ofHydrobiathat occur nearby. The ‘displacement’ of shell size observed in the lagoon in the absence of sympatric hydrobiids is considered to cast further doubt on competitive character displacement in this genus.This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
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