Hamilton Scott L
Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Marine Biology, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106-9610, USA.
Oecologia. 2008 Dec;158(3):449-61. doi: 10.1007/s00442-008-1153-4. Epub 2008 Oct 3.
Upon settlement, many fishes undergo an energetically costly metamorphic period that requires substantial nutritional reserves. Larval growth and the accumulation of lipids prior to metamorphosis are likely to influence growth and survival following this critical period. On the Caribbean island of St. Croix, I investigated relationships between larval growth, early life-history characteristics, and post-metamorphic lipid content in the bluehead wrasse Thalassoma bifasciatum. Lipid reserves remaining after metamorphosis were positively related (r2 = 0.62) to the width of the metamorphic band; thus, this otolith-derived trait may be used to estimate the condition at emergence of survivors collected at some later time. In contrast, pelagic larval duration, average larval growth, and otolith size at settlement were negatively related to post-metamorphic lipid content. Interestingly, the trend for slower growth among fish in good condition was not consistent over the entire pelagic larval duration. Analyses of daily larval growth histories indicated that fish with high lipid reserves grew rapidly in the last week prior to settlement, but relatively slowly during the early phases of larval life; those emerging with low lipid concentrations, however, displayed strikingly opposite patterns. These contrasting patterns of growth and energy storage were consistent at two sites and over three recruitment events. Otolith chemistry data suggested that differences in growth histories and body condition were consistent with the hypothesis of larval development in distinct oceanic environments (characterized by Pb concentration); but, within a water mass, differences reflected life-history trade-offs between growth and energy storage. The results have implications for understanding the processes driving juvenile survival, which may be condition dependent.
在变态期,许多鱼类会经历一个能量消耗巨大的变态阶段,这需要大量的营养储备。幼体生长以及变态前脂质的积累可能会影响这一关键时期后的生长和存活。在加勒比海的圣克罗伊岛上,我研究了蓝头濑鱼(Thalassoma bifasciatum)幼体生长、早期生活史特征与变态后脂质含量之间的关系。变态后剩余的脂质储备与变态带的宽度呈正相关(r2 = 0.62);因此,这个源自耳石的特征可用于估计在稍后时间收集的幸存者变态时的状况。相比之下,浮游幼体持续时间、平均幼体生长以及变态时的耳石大小与变态后脂质含量呈负相关。有趣的是,状况良好的鱼类生长较慢的趋势在整个浮游幼体持续期间并不一致。对每日幼体生长历史的分析表明,脂质储备高的鱼类在变态前最后一周生长迅速,但在幼体生活早期相对较慢;然而,脂质浓度低的幼体则呈现出明显相反的模式。这些生长和能量储存的对比模式在两个地点以及三次补充事件中都是一致的。耳石化学数据表明,生长历史和身体状况的差异与幼体在不同海洋环境(以铅浓度为特征)中发育的假设一致;但是,在一个水体中,差异反映了生长和能量储存之间的生活史权衡。这些结果对于理解驱动幼体存活的过程具有启示意义,幼体存活可能取决于身体状况。