Abstract

A major driving force to mechanistic studies of barnacle gregarious settlement is to contribute to an understanding of observed patterns of settlement in nature. In particular, how cyprids perceive adult conspecifics and how they discriminate between conspecific and allospecific barnacles are questions which have taxed researchers for nearly 50 years. The putative, active component of adult barnacles to which the cyprids respond has long been known to be a glycoprotein, referred to here as the settlement‐inducing protein complex (SIPC). The present study examines the discriminatory abilities of laboratory‐reared Balanus amphitrite and wild Semibalanus balanoides cyprids at settlement. Using a recently developed nitrocellulose membrane‐choice settlement assay, laboratory studies revealed that both species settled at a significantly higher rate on regions of membrane on which crude conspecific SIPC had been adsorbed compared to untreated regions. Moreover, when offered a choice between conspecific and allospecific SIPC, a trend to greater settlement on the conspecific regions was observed. The membrane assay was also evaluated in field trials using real‐time video footage of cyprid searching behaviour. Of 211 S. balanoides cyprids recorded during exploratory behaviour, only one settled. Exploratory behaviour was, however, clearly associated with regions of the membrane treated with either conspecific or allospecific (B. Amphitrite) SIPC compared to untreated regions. These results are generally in accord with previous reports on the discriminatory abilities of barnacle cyprids and suggest that the membrane assay may be usefully applied to field studies of settlement behaviour.

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