4.7 Article

Survive or swim: different relationships between migration potential and larval size in three sympatric Mediterranean octocorals

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SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
卷 10, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-75099-1

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  1. French National Program LITEAU IV of the Ministere de l'Ecologie et de l'Environnement Durable under project RocConnect-Connectivite des habitats rocheux fragmentes du Golfe du Lion (de Marseille au Cap de Creus) et son role dans la persistence regionale d [12-MUTS-LITEAU-1-CDS-013]
  2. EC Interreg Marittimo program under project IMPACT-IMpatto Portuale su aree marine protette: Azioni Cooperative Transfrontaliere [CUP B12F17000370005]
  3. CNRS/CSIC under project Gorgol [25331]
  4. Project BENTOLARV [CTM2009-10007]
  5. University Autonoma of Barcelona

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Knowledge about migration potential is key to forecasting species distributions in changing environments. For many marine benthic invertebrates, migration happens during reproduction because of larval dispersal. The present study aims to test whether larval size can be used as a surrogate for migration potential arising from larval longevity, competence, sinking, or swimming behavior. The hypothesis was tested using larvae of three sympatric gorgonian species that release brooded lecithotrophic larvae in the same season: Paramuricea clavata, Corallium rubrum and Eunicella singularis. Despite different fecundities and larval sizes, the median larval longevity was similar among the three species. Free-fall speed increased with larval size. Nevertheless, the only net sinkers were the P. clavata larvae, as swimming was more common than free fall in the other two species with larger larvae. For the other two species, swimming activity frequency decreased as larval size increased. Interestingly, maximum larval longevity was lowest for the most active but intermediately sized larvae. Larval size did not covary consistently with any larval traits of the three species when considered individually. We thus advise not using larval size as a surrogate for migration potential in distribution models. The three species exemplified that different mechanisms, i.e., swimming activity or larval longevity, resulting from a trade-off in the use of energy reserves can facilitate migration, regardless of life history strategy.

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