Trade-off between offspring number and offspring size in the marine copepod Euterpina acutifrons at different food concentrations
Authors
Guisande, C. (Cástor); Sánchez-Conde, F.J. (Francisco Javier); Maneiro, I.; Miranda, A. (Ana)Date
1996-11-14Type
research articleKeywords
Copepod Reproduction Food concentrationAbstract
collected females of the marine copepod Euterpina acutifrons monthly from November
1994 to January 1996 at a station located in Ria de Vigo (Spain). A trade-off between egg size and
egg number was found. As food concentration measured as mean fluorescence in the water column
diminished, mean number of eggs per sac carried per female decreased, whereas mean egg size
increased. An experiment carried out with adult females cultured at different food concentrations confirmed
the field results, and also showed that as egg size increased, there, was an increase in naupliar
body length at hatching; nauplii developed faster to first copepodite stage, and net reproductive rate
was higher. Therefore, the reproductive strategy of directing more energy toward offspring size rather
than offspring number, at low food concentrations, clearly increases reproductive success.
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