LABORATORY EVIDENCE FOR DELAY OF LARVAL SETTLEMENT IN RESPONSE TO A DOMINANT COMPETITOR
- 1 January 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in International Journal of Invertebrate Reproduction
- Vol. 3 (4), 221-226
- https://doi.org/10.1080/01651269.1981.10553397
Abstract
In nature, the marine bryozoan, Bugula pacifica, is consistently the ‘loser’ when competing for space with the compound ascidian, Diplosoma macdonaldi. We provide laboratory evidence to show that Bugula larvae will delay settling in either ‘Diplosoma-conditioned water’ or an alcohol Diplosoma extract. It is reasoned that the delay response is elicited by an inhibitory factor released continually from Diplosoma. This response is reversible, non-pathological, and species specific. The possible ecological significance of larval avoidance behavior in this and other communities is discussed.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Competitive Networks: Nontransitive Competitive Relationships in Cryptic Coral Reef EnvironmentsThe American Naturalist, 1979
- RESISTANCE OF A TUNICATE TO FOULINGThe Biological Bulletin, 1978
- Alleopathy and spatial competition among coral reef invertebratesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1975
- Inhibition of the Development of a Marine Sessile CommunityNature, 1961
- EXTRINSIC FACTORS INFLUENCING METAMORPHOSIS IN BRYOZOAN AND ASCIDIAN LARVAEAmerican Zoologist, 1961
- PARALLEL LEVEL-BOTTOM COMMUNITIES, THEIR TEMPERATURE ADAPTATION, AND THEIR "BALANCE" BETWEEN PREDATORS AND FOOD ANIMALSPublished by University of California Press ,1958