Hang on Tight: Association with Algae During Egg Development Limits Invasiveness in Haloa japonica
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Baca, Berenice
Kumpitsch, Luisa
Richmond, Keana
Tan, Yu Kai
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Abstract
Characterizing population demography and habitat selection is one of the key factors in
predicting invasion outcomes. Native cephalaspidean Haminoea vesicula and introduced Haloa
japonica on San Juan Island, WA are distinct in their egg-laying substratum preference. The
former is indiscriminate in substratum use whereas the latter almost exclusively oviposits on
macrophytes and algae. We investigated whether occurrence of macroalgae or macrophytes is
essential to the development of cephalaspidean eggs. We reciprocally transplanted native
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Haminoea vesicula and introduced Haloa japonica from their respective habitats in False Bay and
Argyle Lagoon on San Juan Island, WA, and replicated reciprocal rearing in the lab. Our field
surveys and transplant experiments indicate that oviposition on filamentous algae leads to higher
rates of egg development in H. japonica. This strong algal association could constrain adult habitat
selection to sites with high macroalgal/macrophyte availability, controlling the invasive potential
of H. japonica. Such sites may not be optimal for H. vesicula for oviposition, even in the absence
of H. japonica, as H. vesicula egg masses ruptured pre-hatching when reared in reciprocal
conditions in the lab. Our field survey also revealed a third species of cephalaspidean occurring in
these well-studied nature preserves—Haminoea virescens—and enabled comparative analyses of
their egg mass biology.
