Abstract

The life history of the bivalve-inhabiting hydroid Eugymnanthea inquilina was investigated in two different hosts, the mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis (collected from 1989–1991 from the Ionian Sea, Italy) and the clam Ruditapes decussatus (collected from 1991–1992, Ionian Sea, Italy). Hydroids living in mussels revealed a size selection for hosts longer than 40 mm, being almost completely absent in mussels below this size. This might be controlled by signals linked to the sexual maturity of the bivalve. The proportion of molluscs inhabited showed a seasonal trend in mussels only, with a sharp decline at the onset of medusoid liberation. Production of medusoids was high in mussels, whereas medusoids were rare and often abortive in clams. This indicates a higher degree of fitness of E. inquilina in mussels than in clams. The hydroid life cycle was not completed in clams, which therefore were presumably supplied by planulae from medusoids produced by mussel-inhabiting hydroids. Mussels played a key role in the stability and persistence of E. inquilina populations in the studied area. Selective ingestion of trematode sporocysts by E. inquilina hydroids indicated a protective role of the hydroid against mussel parasites, leading to reconsideration of this symbiotic association as a possible mutualism rather than a simple inquilinism.

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