Reproductive cycle of the bivalve Lima scabra (Pterioida: Limidae) and its association with environmental conditions

We examined the reproductive cycle of a tropical bivalve, the fire scallop Lima (Ctenoides) scabra (Born, 1778), over a 14 months period in the Golfo de Cariaco, Venezuela, and the association of gonadal growth and spawning with environmental factors. Most small individuals were males and most large individuals females, indicating the protandrous characteristic of this species. We documented three marked decreases in gonadal mass, from late October to December 1992, from early June to early July 1993 and from late October to early December 1993, and all were associated with drops in temperature related to renewed upwelling. This suggested that major synchronized spawnings were stimulated by drops in temperature or other factors related to the onset of upwelling. Multiple regression analyses indicated that the major environmental factor associated with increases in gonadal mass was phytoplanktonic food availability. Analyses of regressions of mass of somatic tissues to shell height suggested decreases in reserves in somatic tissues at the end of the November-December spawnings, but not at the end of the June-July spawning. This may be because body reserves are used for reproduction during November and December when phytoplanktonic food availability is low.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lodeiros,César J., Himmelman,John H.
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Universidad de Costa Rica 1999
Online Access:http://www.scielo.sa.cr/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0034-77441999000300014
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