Abstract

Controlled observations in Roscoe Bay examined whether Aurelia labiata medusae would respond to three environmentally significant stimuli: low salinity, seawater movement and seawater depth. Significantly more upward-swimming medusae turned and swam down or sideways when they encountered an experimentally created low-salinity plume than did upward-swimming medusae that encountered a seawater plume or a seawater plume containing milk powder. Downward-swimming medusae that encountered a plume containing freshwater continued swimming down. Significantly more upward-swimming medusae exposed to an experimentally created stream of seawater that gently pushed them horizontally turned and swam down than did upward-swimming medusae not exposed to the seawater stream. Downward-swimming medusae continued to swim down when pushed horizontally. A stronger seawater stream that tumbled as well as pushed medusae horizontally was less effective. In a shallow area near the time of a low tide, most medusae were in the top metre of a 2 m water column whilst in an adjacent area where the water was 4–6 m deep, almost all medusae were below 1.5 m. These observations add to a growing body of evidence that the ecological distribution of A. labiata is influenced by their ability to respond adaptively to significant environmental stimuli.

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