Mass spawning by the date mussel Lithophaga lithophaga

Abstract Lithophaga lithophaga is one of the commonest bivalves in the Mediterranean Sea and is present in almost every subtidal calcareous rock. Its reproductive cycle is known only from laboratory studies. Herein, we present data on the species reproductive activities based on localised but mass s...

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Main Authors: Ante Žuljević, Marija Despalatović, Ivan Cvitković, Brian Morton, Boris Antolić
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2018-07-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-28826-8
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spelling doaj-d12a9ee7cdaa4666b6b47a6ef972b4632020-12-08T04:54:05ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222018-07-01811810.1038/s41598-018-28826-8Mass spawning by the date mussel Lithophaga lithophagaAnte Žuljević0Marija Despalatović1Ivan Cvitković2Brian Morton3Boris Antolić4Institute of Oceanography and FisheriesInstitute of Oceanography and FisheriesInstitute of Oceanography and FisheriesSchool of Biological Sciences, The University of Hong KongInstitute of Oceanography and FisheriesAbstract Lithophaga lithophaga is one of the commonest bivalves in the Mediterranean Sea and is present in almost every subtidal calcareous rock. Its reproductive cycle is known only from laboratory studies. Herein, we present data on the species reproductive activities based on localised but mass synchronized spawning events. The species reproduces at the end of the northern hemisphere summer and the majority of significant spawning events occur during the period between full moon and its last quarter. Calm seas are an important pre-requisite for the development of such co-ordinated mass spawning events. ‘Gamete to gamete’ induction seems to be the most likely proximate cue in synchronising gamete release. Spawning begins with a few individuals but spreads progressively along the coastline. In observed situations, reproductive waves finally affect between 10 and >400 m of coastline from 0 to 10 m depth and last longer than three days. In the reproductive zone, dense gamete clouds reduce visibility to zero over tens of metres along the shallow sea bed. No spawning events of such dimensions have been reported upon before for any bivalve.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-28826-8
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ante Žuljević
Marija Despalatović
Ivan Cvitković
Brian Morton
Boris Antolić
spellingShingle Ante Žuljević
Marija Despalatović
Ivan Cvitković
Brian Morton
Boris Antolić
Mass spawning by the date mussel Lithophaga lithophaga
Scientific Reports
author_facet Ante Žuljević
Marija Despalatović
Ivan Cvitković
Brian Morton
Boris Antolić
author_sort Ante Žuljević
title Mass spawning by the date mussel Lithophaga lithophaga
title_short Mass spawning by the date mussel Lithophaga lithophaga
title_full Mass spawning by the date mussel Lithophaga lithophaga
title_fullStr Mass spawning by the date mussel Lithophaga lithophaga
title_full_unstemmed Mass spawning by the date mussel Lithophaga lithophaga
title_sort mass spawning by the date mussel lithophaga lithophaga
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2018-07-01
description Abstract Lithophaga lithophaga is one of the commonest bivalves in the Mediterranean Sea and is present in almost every subtidal calcareous rock. Its reproductive cycle is known only from laboratory studies. Herein, we present data on the species reproductive activities based on localised but mass synchronized spawning events. The species reproduces at the end of the northern hemisphere summer and the majority of significant spawning events occur during the period between full moon and its last quarter. Calm seas are an important pre-requisite for the development of such co-ordinated mass spawning events. ‘Gamete to gamete’ induction seems to be the most likely proximate cue in synchronising gamete release. Spawning begins with a few individuals but spreads progressively along the coastline. In observed situations, reproductive waves finally affect between 10 and >400 m of coastline from 0 to 10 m depth and last longer than three days. In the reproductive zone, dense gamete clouds reduce visibility to zero over tens of metres along the shallow sea bed. No spawning events of such dimensions have been reported upon before for any bivalve.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-28826-8
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