Effect of habitat cues on the swimming behavior of pre-competent Lacuna vincta larvae from Friday Harbor, WA, USA
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Fagerström, Vilhelm
Dykman, Lauren
Bates, Eileen
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Abstract
Swimming behavior in planktonic larvae has been suggested to affect their dispersal and
recruitment. Behavioral regulation of vertical distribution can affect the extent to which larvae
may accumulate in or escape from vertically sheared flows or fronts. Competent larvae of many
invertebrate species are known to respond to various settlement cues in the environment by
regulating their behavior in order to facilitate settling in suitable habitats. The behavioral
responses of pre-competent larvae to cues from the adult habitat could have implications for
retention, however such responses have not been investigated. In this project we have studied the
swimming behavior in pre-competent larvae from the gastropod Lacuna vincta in the laboratory
with the objective of determining whether behavioral changes in response to potential settlement
cues are present in larvae at that earlier developmental stage. Potential settlement cues included
in this study are eelgrass (Zostera marina), the kelp Agarum fimbriatum, and adult L. vincta, in
addition to a control of filtered seawater. Pre-competent L.vincta larvae were recorded swimming
in water columns containing water in which these various cues had been soaked, and their
behaviors were compared across treatments. Videos were analyzed for mean upward swimming
speed, mean swimming speed along the path of travel, mean oscillatory speed, and mean axial
speed for each treatment. For all metrics, there were no significant differences between all four
treatments and the control. The sample size of larvae was consistently low in the kelp cue as
larvae remained on the bottom of the column, possibly due to high viscosity of that cue water.
Our results indicated no response to adult habitat cues when larvae are pre-competent.
