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Filtration and oxygen consumption in mussels,Mytilus edulis,with and without pea crabs,Pinnotheres maculatus
Authors:Rosina Bierbaum  Sandra E Shumway
Institution:1. Department of Ecology and Evolution, State University of New York, 11794-5000, Stony Brook, New York
Abstract:Filtration rates and oxygen consumption rates were measured in mussels (Mytilus edulis) with and without pea crabs (Pinnotheres maculatus). Noninfested mussels had a significantly higher rate of oxygen consumption per hour (0.578 ml±0.012) than did infested mussels (0.352 ml±0.012). There was no significant effect of pea crab size on mussel respiration. Filtration rates of infested mussels were significantly lower than those of uninfested mussels. Assimilation efficiency was not significantly affected by pea crab infestation. The relationship between body size and oxygen consumption inP. maculatus is given by the following equation: {ie264-1} W0.626, where {ie264-2} is oxygen uptake (ml h?1), and W is dry weight (g). There was no difference between the sexes. It is concluded that the decreased oxygen consumption observed in infested mussels is not due to limitation of oxygen availability, but rather reflects a real metabolic response to the presence of the symbiont and the concomittant deprivation of food to the host. The effect is probably reversible, that is, damage can be compensated for after the symbiont has vacated the mussel, depending upon the period of infestation. Our results indicate that the mussels infested by pea crabs may be at an energetic disadvantage relative to mussels without pea crabs.
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