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Comparative study of sympatric populations of two hyperiid amphipods, Primno johnsoni and P. evansi, from the eastern North Atlantic Ocean

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Abstract

Hyperiid amphipods are common components of oceanic plankton communities, and yet information is lacking on the ecology and biology of the majority of species. This study compares sympatric populations of two phrosinids, Primno johnsoni Bowman and P. evansi Sheader, using material collected on R.R.S. “Discovery” Cruises 121 and 140 in the eastern North Atlantic Ocean. The two species were essentially very similar in terms of their vertical distribution and diurnal migration, and in the timing and sequence of reproductive events (onset of maturity, ovary/oocyte development, marsupial development). Mature female and male size ranges were comparable for the two species, males maturing at a small body size, with little subsequent growth, and females producing a succession of 5 (P. evansi) or 6 (P. johnsoni) broods maximum. The species differed significantly in egg size and in total egg output. These dissimilarities were accentuated by differences in the patterns of female mortality in the two species, such that actual egg output per female was 1.8 times greater (2.4 times in terms of total egg volume) in P. johnsoni than in P. evansi. These differences were reflected in the relative size of populations in the field. Although both species are capable of consuming a wide range of planktonic prey, it is assumed that gelatinous species are important, especially as hosts for the parasitoid juvenile stages, and it is suggested that host-specificity might act to separate the niches.

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Communicated by J. Mauchline, Oban

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Sheader, M., Batten, S.D. Comparative study of sympatric populations of two hyperiid amphipods, Primno johnsoni and P. evansi, from the eastern North Atlantic Ocean. Marine Biology 124, 43–50 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00349145

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00349145

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