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Growth and Reproduction in the Deep Sea

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Title: Growth and Reproduction in the Deep Sea


1
Growth and Reproduction in the Deep Sea
  • Rachel Whitney
  • Brad Morris

2
Ecological constraints of Growth and Reproduction
  • Environmental constraints must be evaluated,
    since temperature and salinity in the deep sea
    rarely fluctuate, and since light is absent in
    benthic zones, then food must be the predominant
    constraint on growth and reproduction based on an
    increased availability of nutrients in the
    sediment layers
  • 2 major ecological factors
  • Benthic storms and turbidity currents
  • Particle flux
  • Others related to habitat
  • Hydrothermal vent dynamics
  • Ephemeral and temporary habitats

3
Benthic storms and turbidity flow through
microenvironments
  • Horizontal advection with seasonal variance
  • Seasonal changes in the benthic boundary layer
    involved in the production of high laminar flow
    rates in the nephiloid layer
  • Rates as low as 7 cm s-1 (just 1 m off bottom)
    can disturb benthic settlement and promotes
    resuspension events in the benthos
  • Epifaunal and infaunal organisms can disturb
    settlement and promote resuspension through
    activity

4
Particle Flux
  • Seasonal variation
  • Rate of particulate sink can vary greatly from
    1-1000 m per day
  • About 90 of sinking particulate matter is
    consumed before reaching the benthos, with
    roughly 1 eventually settling on the bottom
  • Periodicity of particle flux is easier to
    determine above the BBL.
  • Diurnal tide flux can cause elevation of
    particulate matter in the water column

5
Seasonal signals
  • Small particulate organic matter entering the
    BBL is the main source of food for many
    organisms living there JD Gage
  • Varies with proximity to landmasses and
    freshwater offshoots
  • Seasonal signal can be significantly diminished
    in oligotrophic seas, however deep trenches and
    canyons off coastal waters can show an enhanced
    localization of particulate flux due to shelf
    isolation

6
Food Falls
  • Large animal
  • Macroalgae and seagrasses
  • Phytodetritus

7
Growth
  • Measuring techniques
  • Strategies
  • Controls

8
Measuring Growth
  • Growth bands in calcareous plates of echinoderms
  • Coarse-pored areas reflect periods of relatively
    rapid growth, fine-pored areas created when
    growth is slower
  • Growth rings in otoliths of fish
  • Direct observations

9
Wilson (1988)
10
Growth Strategies
  • Decreasing growth rate with increasing age
  • Modeled by Von Bertalanffy
  • LtL8-( L8-L0)e-K(t-t0)
  • Lt size at time t
  • L8 max size attainable
  • L0settlement size
  • T0settlement time
  • Krate constant

11
Growth Strategies
  • Growth rate increases initially, and then
    decreases with age
  • Modeled with Gompertz function
  • LtL8e-e-K(t-t0)
  • Lt size at time t
  • L8 max size attainable
  • t0settlement time
  • Krate constant
  • Common in urchins

12
  • Gage, J.D. (1990)

13
Growth Strategies
  • Indeterminate growth growth and reproduction
    occur simultaneously.
  • Ex. Echinus affinis After maturity the volume
    rate of growth does not decline but becomes
    constant.

14
Middleton and Gurner (1998)
15
Growth Strategies
  • Sexual dimorphism
  • Ex. Red crab, Chaceon affinis
  • Males grow larger than females
  • Secondary sexual characteristics related to
    reproductive behaviours

Fernández-Vergaz et al (2000)
16
Growth Strategies
  • Growth Phases
  • Crustaceans have 2 growth phases puberal and
    mature.
  • In the crab, morphometric maturity is independent
    of physiological maturity.
  • Chaceon affinis females become morphometrically
    mature before they become physiologically mature,
    but males attain sexually mature before they
    reach morphometric maturity

17
Fernández-Vergaz et al (2000)
18
Controls of Growth
  • Depth
  • Growth rate of two upper bathyal Echinus sp were
    between those of the faster-growing shallow-water
    Echinus esculentus, and the slower-growing
    deep-sea Echinus affinis. Gage et al 1986)
  • Lampitt (1990) calculated growth rates in
    deep-sea barnacles several times lower than rates
    reported for near-surface barnacles.
  • Sumida et al (2000) found that brittle star
    Ophiocten gracilis post larvae collected outside
    their depth range (deeper) showed slower rates of
    growth.

19
Controls of Growth
  • Food availability
  • Some small deep-sea species can accelerate growth
    and experience early maturation when food
    availability is increased.
  • Ex. Barnacle, Poecilasma kaempferi studied by
    Lampitt (1990) showed increase in growth rate by
    several times during mid-May phytodetritus
    deposition from spring bloom.
  • Varying feeding rate in lab can induce growth
    zones in calcareous test of urchins.

20
Lampitt (1990)
21
Controls of Growth
  • Seasonal patterns
  • Patterns in growth bands in skeletal plates of
    deep-sea echinoids have been thought to reflect
    seasonal variability in growth rates, maybe a
    result of seasonal cycles in reproduction or
    nutrition.

22
Controls of Growth
  • Activity Rhythms
  • Photoperiod is the zeitgeber that initiates
    activity in shallow water fish. (Daily growth
    rings seen in otoliths)
  • Macrourid sagittae have daily growth rings
    similar to shallow water species
  • Wilson (1988) suggested that tidal cycles could
    be the cue in deep-sea fish, since they can sense
    the tidal cues and current directions.

23
Reproduction
  • Form
  • Pattern
  • Dependance
  • Adaptation

24
Forms
  • Two allocations
  • Gonochoristic
  • Hermaphroditic (teratogenic in some species)
  • A. carchara gonochoric ophuroid, over 40 spp.
    of Ophuroids are hermaphroditic
  • Species specialization

25
Patterns of reproduction
  • Slow egg producing
  • Seasonal (periodic continuous)
  • Continuous (continuous asynchronous)
  • Auto or heterosynthetic vitellogenesis
  • Fast egg producing
  • Oppourtunistic
  • Modified heterosynthetic vitellogenesis

26
Reproductive Patterns
27
Vitellogenesis and Phylogenic constraints
  • Yolk production in the female of a gonochoristic
    spp.
  • Does not fit any one pattern of reproduction, no
    discrete form, however varies across taxa and
    more similar in closely relate spp.
  • Fecundity increase with increase in nutrients,
    phylogenetically dependant
  • Critical Nutrient Hypothesis
  • Annual and monthly breeders different

28
Semelparity vs. Iteroparity
  • Volitile vs. Stable habitat
  • Seasonal vs. Continuous breeder
  • - ephemeral habitats show environmental
    fluctuation and therefore background species
    frequently displaced
  • - oligotrophic areas generally indicative of
    more established assemblages

29
Adaptations for Reproduction
  • Given by
  • Temporal patterns of Reproduction
  • Fecundity and Fertility
  • Breeding and Development (reviewed later in this
    class)

30
Periodicity in Gametogenesis
  • Quasi-continuous/periodic
  • Synchrony between individuals/ under
    environmental or endogenous control
  • Gametogenesis
  • Instantaneous fecundity
  • Maximum oocyte size
  • Seasonality of development

31
Possible Mechanisms of Seasonal Reproduction
32
Examples from comparative species
  • Protobranch bivalves
  • M. cuneata (continuous), L. pustulosa, Y.
    jefferysi (seasonal)
  • Asteroids
  • H inermis, S. Chuni and S horridus (all
    continuous)
  • Ophuroids
  • O. ljungmani

33
Fecundity and Fertility
  • Different for semelparous and iteroparous species
  • Depends on type of development of species as well
    which in turn indicates the overall number of
    oocytes per gonad
  • Mature individuals in reproductive state will
    allocate more energy expenditure to gametogenesis
    at somatic expense

34
Examples in fecundity
  • Ophuroids
  • A.carchara embyros in broding females from 1 to
    72, low fecundity
  • O. Graciallis disk dependant fecundity (up to
    ca. 51000)
  • Protobraches
  • M.cuneata lowest fecundity with largest oocyte
    size
  • L.pustulosa and Y.jefferysi higher fecundity with
    significantly decreased egg size

35
Restrictions to evaluation of Growth and
Reproduction
  • Growth and reproductive measures lacking for many
    species
  • Collection methods skewed
  • Indirect calculations, hypothesis testing
  • Comparative coastal to deep sea lifestyles

36
References
  • Eckelbarger, K.J., Watling, L., 1995. Role of
    phylogenetic constraints in determining
    reproductive patterns in deep-sea invertebrates.
    Invertebrate biology 114 (3) 256-269.
  •  
  • Fernandez-Vergaz,-V. Lopez-Abellan,-L.J.
    Balguerias,-E., 2000.Morphometric, functional and
    sexual maturity of the deep-sea red crab Chaceon
    affinis inhabiting Canary Island waters
    Chronology of maturation. Mar-Ecol-Prog-Ser 204
    169-178
  • Gage, J.D. 1990.  Skeletal growth markers in the
    deep-sea brittle stars Ophiura ljungmani and
    Ophiomusium lymani. Marine Biology 104, pp
    427-435
  • Gage, J.D., 1994. Recruitment Ecology and Age
    structure of Deep -Sea Invertebrate populations.
    In Reproduction, larval biology, and recruitment
    of the deep-sea benthos. Eckelbarger, K .J. and
    Young, C. M. (eds) Columbia University Press,
    New York. pp 223-242
  • Gage, J. D., Tyler, P.A., and Nichols, D.
    Reproduction and growth of Echinus acutus var
    norvegicus Duben  Koren and E. elegans Duben
    Koren on the continental slope off Scotland.
    Journal of experimental marine biology and
    ecology, 101, pp 61-83
  •  
  • Harrison, K. 1988. Seasonal reproduction in
    deep-sea Crustacea ( Isopoda Asellota). J. Nat.
    Hist. 22 (1)175-197.
  •  
  • Hendler, G., Tran, L.U., 2000. Reproductive
    biology of a deep-sea brittle star Ampiura
    carchara ( Echinodermata Ophiuroidea).Mar. Biol.
    138(1) 113-123.
  •  
  • Lampitt,-R.S., 1990. Directly measured rapid
    growth of a deep-sea barnacle. Nature 345, no.
    6278, pp. 805-807

37
  • Lightfoot, R.H., Tyler, P.A., and Gage, J.D.
    1979. Seasonal reproduction in deep-sea bivalves
    and brittle stars . Deep-sea research  26A , pp
    967-973.
  • Middleton, D.A.J., Gurner, W.S.C., 1998. Growth
    and energy allocation in the deep-sea urchin
    Echinus affinus. Biological Journal of the
    Linnean Society 64315-336.
  •  
  • Ramirez-Llodra, E., Tyler, P.A., Billett, D.S.M.
    2002. Reproductive biology of porcillanasterid
    asteroids from three abyssal sites in the
    northeast Atlantic with contrasting food input.
    Marine Biology 140 773-788.
  • Scheltema, R.S., 1994.  Adaptations for
    reproduction among deep-sea molluscs An
    appraisal of the existing evidence In
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    the deep-sea benthos. Eckelbarger, K .J. and
    Young, C. M. (eds) Columbia University Press,
    New York, pp 44-75.
  •  
  • Sumida, P.Y.A., Tyler, P. A., Lampitt, R.S.,
    2000. Reproduction, dispersal and settlement of
    the bathyal ophiuroid Ophiopecten gracilis in the
    NE Atlantic Ocean. Marine Biology 137623-630.
  •  
  • Tyler, P.A., Harvey. R., Giles, L.A., Gage, J.D.
    1992. Reproductive strategies and diet in
    deep-sea nuculanid protobranchs (Bivalvia
    Nuculoidea) from the Rockall Trough. Marine
    biology, 114, pp. 571-580
  • Tyler, P. A., Campos-Creasey, L.S., and Giles, L.
    A., 1994. Environmental control of
    quasi-continuous and seasonal reproduction in
    deep-sea benthic invertebrates In Reproduction,
    larval biology, and recruitment of the deep-sea
    benthos. Eckelbarger, K .J. and Young, C. M.
    (eds) Columbia University Press, New York. pp
    158-178.
  •  
  •  

38
  • Wigham. B.D., Tyler, P.A., Billett, D.S.M. 2003.
    Rerpoductive biology of the abyssal holothurian
    Amperima rosea an opportunistic response to
    variable flux of surface derived organic matter?
    J. Mar. Biol. Assoc. UK 83 175-188.
  • Wilson Jr., R.R. 1988. Analysis of growth zones
    and microstructure in otoliths of two macrourids
    from the North Pacific abyss. Environmental
    biology of fishes 21. no. 4 pp 251-261.
  • Witte, U.,1996. Seasonal reproduction in the
    deep-sea sponges- Triggered by vertical particle
    flux? Marine Biology 124 (4)571-581.
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