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The biology of external fertilization indeep-sea echinoderms

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Date Issued:
1994
Title: The biology of external fertilization indeep-sea echinoderms.
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Name(s): Young, Craig M.
Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute
Type of Resource: text
Genre: Article
Date Issued: 1994
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Place of Publication: New York, NY
Physical Form: pdf
Extent: 13 p.
Language(s): English
Identifier: FA00007333 (IID)
Note(s): External fertilization by free spawning is much more common than internal fertilization among bathyal and abyssal echinoderms. A few species of echinoids may pseudocopulate by exchanging gametes in masses of mucus, which are retained on the adult spines. In deep-sea species of Aspidodiadema, elongate sperm nuclei may be an adaptation for swimming through the thick mucus that holds the eggs. Denny's (1988) model of fertilization success predicts that, all else being equal, external fertilization should be a more viable strategy on smooth sedimentary bottoms in the deep sea than in the more turbulent flow conditions found in shallow water. This is contrary to Thorson's Rule, which predicts greater incidence of brooding (and, by inference, internal fertilization) with depth. Reproduction at low population density is sometimes achieved by echinoids, holothuroids, and ophiuroids by aggregation behaviors. Some species aggregate year round and others remain with spawning partners only during the reproductive season. Gametes of echinothuriids contain lipid reserves that apparently allow sperm to remain motile more than three times as long as typical shallow-water echinoid sperm. Functional significance of some gamete modifications, including biflagellate, dimorphic, and pigmented sperm, remains unknown.
Florida Atlantic University. Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute contribution 1010
This manuscript is an author version with the final publication available and may be cited as: Young, C. M. (1994). The biology of external fertilization in deep-sea echinoderms. In C. M. Young & K. J. Eckelbarger (Eds.), Reproduction, larval biology, and recruitment of the deep-sea benthos (pp. 179-200). New York, NY: Columbia University Press.
Subject(s): Echinoderms
Fertilization (Biology)
Spawning
Deep-sea biology
Benthos
Persistent Link to This Record: http://purl.flvc.org/fau/fd/FA00007333
Host Institution: FAU