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The life history and sexual biology of Pseudunciola obliquua (crustacea: amphipoda) in the New York Bight
Authors:M. A. Morgan  P. M. J. Woodhead
Affiliation:Marine Sciences Research Center, State University of New York at Stony Brook, Long Island, New York 11794, USA
Abstract:Pseudunciola obliquua is the most abundant subtidal amphipod of the near-shore macrobenthos in the New York Bight south of Fire Island. It has an annual life-cycle. Breeding occurs in March and April, and a single brood of between 8 and 20 eggs per female is produced. Fecundity is linearly proportional to maternal length. The eggs take about two months to develop; the juveniles emerge in June and July. Initial recruitment in the study area was estimated to be 2980 and 5850 per m2 for the 1979–1980 and 1980–1981 year classes, respectively. Of the initial recruits only about 10% survive to form the reproductive stock of the following spring.Females and males grow at similar rates and are equally abundant as juveniles and initially as adults, until they reach sexual maturity. After breeding, the abundance of males decreases rapidly due to post-reproductive death. Females continue to live, carrying the developing eggs in their brood pouches. Mean female growth increases throughout the brooding period until the young are released, shortly after which adult females also die. The entire generation of reproductive adults has died by September.
Keywords:Amphipoda   life cycle   reproduction   fecundity   recruitment   survival   New York Bight
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