Main Content

The World of Protozoa, Rotifera, Nematoda and Oligochaeta

Ref ID : 18

Laura Serrano, Manuel Serra, and Maria Rosa Miracle; Size variation in Brachionus plicatilis resting eggs. Hydrobiologia 186/187:381-386, 1989

Reprint

In File

Notes

The effect of temperature and salinity on resting egg size of two Brachionus plicatilis (Rotifera) clones was investigated. Clones were selected according to their different behaviour in laying resting eggs: one clone ejects them, whereas they remain inside the females body in the other clone. The difference in resting eggs size between the two clones is noticeable, although the difference is not as great as that between female body size. An important temperature-salinity interaction on resting egg size has been observed. The general inverse relationship between size and temperature is only true at lower temperatures. At high temperatures size varies around the mean although could be greater than at intermediate temperatures. This is more evident at the intermediate salinity tested which is considered to be the closest to the optimum in our experiments. This pattern of variation suggests that mean size is bigger than expected, in relation to temperature and salinity, when these factors have values close to the extremes of their range, normally found in nature, and to which adaptive mechanisms can evolve. Size is bigger at the salinity-temperature low-low and high-high combinations which are the most commonly found in the temperate environments.