Comparison of indices for the assessment of reproductive activity inHexaplex trunculus(Gastropoda: Muricidae) (original) (raw)
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Invertebrate Reproduction & Development, 2004
Some authors have studied and described different aspects of the reproductive cycle of Hexaplex (Trunculariopsis) trunculus, but most data are quite ancient and fragmented, lacking information in important respects on the reproductive cycle of this species. Based on several individual and collective spawns deposited in laboratory aquaria, this study provides additional and more detailed information on the spawning behaviour and egg-laying pattern, description of the general morphology and dimensions of the spawns, egg capsules, eggs, embryos and early post-metamorphic juveniles, as well as the first data available on the growth rate of T. trunculus hatchlings and juveniles (until 4 months old). Females deposited an average of 118 ± 89 tongue-shaped egg capsules per individual spawn, measuring on average 5.5 mm length x 4.7 mm width x 2.6 mm thickness. These egg capsules contained 723 ± 66 eggs with an average diameter of 240 ± 8 μm. T. trunculus is a direct developer species (metamorphosed hatchlings) with an incubation period of approximately 1 month. At hatching, individuals measured 1.64 ± 0.22 mm shell length and presented a growth rate of 2.5 mm/month at the end of 4 months. The breeding habits, embryonic development, hatchling and juvenile growth rates are discussed in terms of their implications for the management of the artisanal fishery for T. trunculus in the Ria Formosa lagoon and the assessment of the potential of this muricid species for molluscan aquaculture.
Journal of Molluscan Studies, 2006
The muricid Hexaplex (Trunculariopsis) trunculus lacks external sexual dimorphism and is highly affected by imposex, which further complicates its sexual identification. In this context, the aim of this study was to develop sexual indices based on the dimensions of male and imposex-affected female penis, which could constitute a useful, simple and nonsacrificial tool for sexing live specimens of T. trunculus. The adoption of sexual indices consisting of penis dimensions of both sexes relative to individual size revealed a high accuracy in the sexual identification of sacrificed specimens (.95% correct sexing). Additionally, multivariate discriminant analysis allowed correct sexing of 98.8% of the original 1053 sacrificed individuals, with accurate sexual identification being higher for males (99.5%) than for imposexaffected females (97.7%). An anaesthetization experiment was performed to investigate the effects produced by the anaesthetic (MgCl 2) on penis measurements, to test this nonsacrificial approach and to validate the previously developed sexual indices. The anaesthetic provoked an expected enlargement in penis dimensions but, despite this side effect, the sexual indices developed for sacrificed specimens were still highly successful in sexing anaesthetized T. trunculus (generally more than 95% correct sexual identification). The practical application and some limitations of developing and employing this kind of index for the sexual identification of T. trunculus and other imposex-affected gastropod species are discussed.
Journal of Shellfish Research, 2010
The reproductive biology of a population of the edible muricid Trophon geversianus inhabiting an intertidal rocky shore in Golfo Nuevo (Chubut, Argentina) was studied regarding the seasonality of oviposition and oviposition induction under laboratory conditions. Sex ratio in the population differed from 1:1 (female biased). The mean shell length was 22 mm for males and 24 mm for females, although the females presented significantly larger maximum sizes. No external sexual dimorphism was evident, whereas the female snails differed internally by the presence of the albumin and capsule gland and by gonad color. Although the population under study inhabits an area with marine traffic and a concentration of 1.9 ng Sn/g, it did not present signs of imposex, in contrast with other sympatric species. T. geversianus presented a marked reproductive seasonality during the study period. Oviposition started in May and concluded in November, when hatching of crawling embryos was registered up to January. This seasonality coincided with changes in water surface temperature, ambient temperature, and photoperiod. Reproductive activities were registered when the environmental stress was minimum. In the aquarium, each female laid an average of 12 egg capsules (range, 6-26) per oviposition event, and needed a total of 25 h (range,12-57 h) to complete attachment of a single egg capsule. Data presented here could be useful for culture of the species.
Journal of The Marine Biological Association of The United Kingdom, 2009
Tributyltin (TBT) exposure experiments at 5 and 50 ng l 21 concentrations were carried out in the laboratory on female Hexaplex trunculus collected during the reproductive season from a site weakly-affected by imposex (12.1%). The imposex intensity estimated by the imposex incidence or frequency (I%), the average length of the vas deferens (VDL), the average length of female penis (FPL) and the vas deferens sequence index (VDSI) showed significant variation with TBT concentration. The number of spawning females decreased with TBT concentration. TBT had no effect on the number of egg-capsules laid per female nor on the number of eggs per capsule. The egg-capsules laid in the control and 5 ng TBT l 21 aquaria showed harder texture of the wall compared to those exposed to 50 ng TBT l 21 . The mortality rate increased proportionally with TBT concentration and duration of exposure.
Hydrobiologia, 2011
The present study aimed at analysing the monthly variation in penis length (PL) during the reproductive cycle of the purple dye murex (Bolinus brandaris). Two hypotheses were tested: PL variation reflects male maturation and reproductive activity; PL variation bias the calculation of imposex indices based on penis measurement (RPLI and RPSI). Sampling was performed during 1 year in a population from Ria Formosa lagoon (Algarve coast, southern Portugal) with high incidence of imposex. Penis-bearing individuals were measured for shell length (SL) and PL, and two bio-physiological indices were calculated for both sexes, the general condition index (K) and the gonadosomatic index (GSI). PL presented monthly variation in both sexes, but while female PL showed small and random oscillation, male PL exhibited significant variation throughout the reproductive cycle (as evidenced by the similar and synchronous trends between male PL and GSI). These findings have implications both for reproduction studies and imposex monitoring: calculation of standardised PL (PL/SL) allows for gender identification without killing the organism and constitutes a useful penial index for assessing male maturation and reproductive activity; RPLI and RPSI should be applied cautiously in spatial and temporal comparisons of imposex severity in B. brandaris.
Aquatic Biology, 2012
The purple dye murex Bolinus brandaris is a commercially valuable gastropod in Portugal. However, there is a lack of knowledge on the reproductive cycle in Atlantic populations of this species. In this context, the reproductive cycle of B. brandaris from the Ria Formosa lagoon, southern Portugal, was studied using standard histology and light microscopy and the calculation of bio-physiological indices (gonadosomatic indices for both sexes, penial index for males and capsule gland indices for females). Monthly variation in gonad developmental stages and biophysiological indices revealed that B. brandaris has an annual reproductive cycle, long gonadal activity and a relatively short resting phase. Spawning occurred mainly between May and July, with a clear spawning peak from June to July. Gonad maturation and spawning appear to be synchronised with the seasonal variation in seawater temperature. Slight asynchrony between the peak of male gamete release and the peak of female spawning might be interpreted as a modality to increase the reproductive success. The timing of spawning was compared with analogous information available for other regions throughout the species distributional range. The present study provides baseline information for proposing fishery management measures, particularly a closed season in the fishing or harvesting activity during the spawning peak of B. brandaris aimed at protecting the female broodstock and collective spawns. The overall results from the bio-physiological indices (especially the penial index and the area-based gonadosomatic and capsule gland indices) encourage the adoption of similar approaches with other gastropod species, namely in routine analyses that do not require a detailed histological description.
Marine Biology Research, 2012
This study estimated the age of Hexaplex trunculus (Gastropoda: Muricidae) by analysing operculum growth marks. Surface striae and adventitious layers were counted in opercula of H. trunculus from the Ria Formosa Lagoon (southern Portugal) and from the Bizerte Lagoon (northern Tunisia), and in aquacultured individuals used for validation of the ageing technique. Operculum growth features were also compared between H. trunculus populations under contrasting environmental conditions (namely seawater temperature). Despite high inter-individual variability, all H. trunculus populations displayed a clear increasing trend in the number of striae and layers with increasing specimen size. The operculum marginal growth revealed that opercular deposition is not annual. Instead, a few growth marks are formed in the operculum each year, which was confirmed with reared specimens. In both ageing methods, considerable variation in the number of counts at a determined shell length indicates that operculum growth marks should be interpreted cautiously because they might not correspond accurately with individual age. Because of the subjectivity inherent to either method, counting striae and layers in opercula only provides rough age estimates of H. trunculus.
Journal of Shellfish Research, 2010
The reproductive biology of a population of the edible muricid Trophon geversianus inhabiting an intertidal rocky shore in Golfo Nuevo (Chubut, Argentina) was studied regarding the seasonality of oviposition and oviposition induction under laboratory conditions. Sex ratio in the population differed from 1:1 (female biased). The mean shell length was 22 mm for males and 24 mm for females, although the females presented significantly larger maximum sizes. No external sexual dimorphism was evident, whereas the female snails differed internally by the presence of the albumin and capsule gland and by gonad color. Although the population under study inhabits an area with marine traffic and a concentration of 1.9 ng Sn/g, it did not present signs of imposex, in contrast with other sympatric species. T. geversianus presented a marked reproductive seasonality during the study period. Oviposition started in May and concluded in November, when hatching of crawling embryos was registered up to January. This seasonality coincided with changes in water surface temperature, ambient temperature, and photoperiod. Reproductive activities were registered when the environmental stress was minimum. In the aquarium, each female laid an average of 12 egg capsules (range, 6-26) per oviposition event, and needed a total of 25 h (range,12-57 h) to complete attachment of a single egg capsule. Data presented here could be useful for culture of the species.