The effect of salinity upon the boring activity and survival of Limnoria (Isopoda)
- 1 October 1961
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom
- Vol. 41 (3) , 785-797
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0025315400016301
Abstract
SUMMARY: The effect of salinity upon the wood-boring activity of Limnoria was investigated experimentally. Boring decreased linearly with salinity and ceased altogether below io%o. The limiting salinity varied inversely with the temperature, being 12%0 at 17-6 C and 15 %0 at 14-9 C (average temperatures). The boring activity was intensive in its early stages but after about 5 weeks fell to a lower constant rate.Survival experiments suggested that the low salinity was the direct cause of the reduced boring activity. The only lethal salinity found during the period of the experiments (65 days) was 6%0 which proved fatal in about 15-20 days. The next higher salinity tested was i2%0. No reduction in survival was found in concentrated salinities up to a value of 48 %0, the highest salinity examined.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Occurrence of Cellulase in LimnoriaNature, 1952
- STUDIES ON MARINE WOOD BORERS: II. THE EFFECT OF EXPERIMENTAL VARIATIONS IN SALINITY AND HYDROGEN ION CONCENTRATION UPON THE WOOD BORERS OF THE PACIFIC COAST OF CANADAContributions to Canadian Biology and Fisheries, 1929
- Ecological Relations of Marine Wood‐Boring Organisms in San Francisco BayEcology, 1926