IR Home
MEPS
Home
Editors
Forthcoming
Information
Subscribe
Journals
Home
MEPS
AME
CR
DAO
ESEP
ESR
Search
Subscribe
Book Series
EE Books
Top Books
ESEP Books
Order
EEIU Brochures
(pdf format)
Discussion Forums
Home
Research
IR Research
Institutions
International Ecology Institute
Eco-Ethics International Union
Foundation
Otto Kinne Foundation
 |  |
MEPS 287:139-148 (2005)
|
Abstract
|

Form and function in juvenile ascidians. II. Ontogenetic scaling of volumetric flow rates
Kristin M. Sherrard1,3,*, Michael LaBarbera1,2
1Committee on Evolutionary Biology and 2Department of Organismal Biology and Anatomy, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637, USA 3Present address: Friday Harbor Laboratories, 620 University Road, Friday
Harbor, Washington 98250, USA
*Email: kmsherra@u.washington.edu

ABSTRACT: Very little is known of the challenges to suspension feeding performance facing early juvenile marine invertebrates, although scaling considerations suggest juveniles are often at a disadvantage. For example, early juvenile ascidians have
relatively, as well as absolutely, narrower siphons than later stages, generating high resistance to flow (Sherrard & LaBarbera 2005: Mar Ecol Prog Ser 287:127138, this issue). To test whether feeding flow rates are correspondingly decremented
in early juveniles, we measured volumetric flow rates during the ontogeny of 4 species of ascidians, 2 solitary and 2 colonial. Early juveniles of all species had relatively lower flow rates than adults. They exhibited rapid, positively allometric
increases in volumetric flow rates with respect to body size, followed in the solitary species by slightly positively allometric increases thereafter. Positively allometric scaling occurred within different size ranges depending on species and appears to
be driven by reduced resistance as siphons expand rather than a shift in hydrodynamic regime. By 2 to 3 wk after settlement, juveniles of solitary species generated size-specific volumetric flow rates nearly as high as those found in adults. Juveniles of
the colonial species Distaplia occidentalis had superior feeding performance at small size compared with solitary juveniles, but juveniles of another colonial species Botrylloides violaceus did not. Because ascidian larvae are non-feeding,
early juveniles probably benefit from feeding as soon as possible, even at lower efficiency.
KEY WORDS: Ascidian · Early juvenile · Ontogenetic scaling · Suspension feeding
Full text in pdf format

Published in MEPS Vol.
287
(2005) on February 18
Print ISSN: 0171-8630; Online ISSN: 1616-1599.
Copyright © Inter-Research, Oldendorf/Luhe, 2005
|