4.5 Article

Developmental plasticity of shell morphology of quagga mussels from shallow and deep-water habitats of the Great Lakes

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 213, Issue 15, Pages 2602-2609

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.042549

Keywords

biological invasions; bivalve; calcification; common-garden experiment; functional morphology; Great Lakes; moment of inertia; phenotypic plasticity; temperature

Categories

Funding

  1. Wisconsin Sea Grant Institute [R/LR-91]
  2. Center for Limnology and Marine Sciences at the University of Wisconsin
  3. Department of Zoology at the University of Wisconsin

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The invasive zebra mussel (Dreissena polymorpha) has quickly colonized shallow-water habitats in the North American Great Lakes since the 1980s but the quagga mussel (Dreissena bugensis) is becoming dominant in both shallow and deep-water habitats. While quagga mussel shell morphology differs between shallow and deep habitats, functional causes and consequences of such difference are unknown. We examined whether quagga mussel shell morphology could be induced by three environmental variables through developmental plasticity. We predicted that shallow-water conditions (high temperature, food quantity, water motion) would yield a morphotype typical of wild quagga mussels from shallow habitats, while deep-water conditions (low temperature, food quantity, water motion) would yield a morphotype present in deep habitats. We tested this prediction by examining shell morphology and growth rate of quagga mussels collected from shallow and deep habitats and reared under common-garden treatments that manipulated the three variables. Shell morphology was quantified using the polar moment of inertia. Of the variables tested, temperature had the greatest effect on shell morphology. Higher temperature (similar to 18-20 degrees C) yielded a morphotype typical of wild shallow mussels regardless of the levels of food quantity or water motion. In contrast, lower temperature (similar to 6-8 degrees C) yielded a morphotype approaching that of wild deep mussels. If shell morphology has functional consequences in particular habitats, a plastic response might confer quagga mussels with a greater ability than zebra mussels to colonize a wider range of habitats within the Great Lakes.

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