4.4 Article

Taking the Plunge: California Grunion Embryos Emerge Rapidly with Environmentally Cued Hatching

Journal

INTEGRATIVE AND COMPARATIVE BIOLOGY
Volume 51, Issue 1, Pages 26-37

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/icb/icr037

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Funding

  1. Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology
  2. US National Science Foundation [IOS-1036933]
  3. US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
  4. National Marine Fisheries Service - Southwest Region WRAD [8-819]
  5. National Geographic Society [CRE 8105-07]
  6. National Parks Service
  7. Pepperdine University

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The process of hatching has been well studied in some model species of teleosts: the medaka Oryzias latipes, the mummichog Fundulus heteroclitus, and the zebrafish Danio rerio. These models are compared to the California Grunion, Leuresthes tenuis that has some unique features of reproduction related to tidal synchrony of spawning and environmentally cued hatching (ECH). During oviposition at spring tides, this marine teleost spawns out of water to bury its clutches on sandy beaches in the high intertidal zone. After embryos of L. tenuis reach hatching competence, hatching can be triggered at any time. Incubation above the water line inhibits hatching until ECH is triggered by rising tides during the following lunar phase, and hatching occurs within a few seconds. We review the embryo's response to environmental cues at hatching and the effects of the surrounding medium on the chorionase and chorion for this form of ECH. Leuresthes tenuis shares some similarities as well as some important differences with the model species. Comparison of hatching across teleostean taxa indicates great variability in stage at hatching and in duration of incubation that suggest hatching plasticity in response to environmental cues may be more widespread than currently appreciated.

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