Abstract

Mysis mixta were reared under laboratory conditions (temperature: 9-10 degrees C; salinity: 7 per thousand, ad libitum food). Dry weight, ash, total carbon and nitrogen content of mysids (muscle tissue, eggs, and embryos of different developmental stages) have been analyzed. We found significant variations in ash content and elemental composition during growth and maturation for both sexes. The proportion of carbon in abdominal muscle decreased gradually from juveniles with body weight of 3-4 mg (42.9%) to males and gravid females ( approximately 40.0%). The nitrogen content was relatively constant (11.4% in average) with significant differences only between juveniles (11.3%) and mature females (11.6%). In embryos, carbon and nitrogen content were highest in early stages (58.6 and 14.3%, respectively). By the end of the marsupial development, carbon had decreased to 51.4% and nitrogen to 12.6%. The C:N ratio reflected the change in somatic carbon content, and the ratio decreased 6.2% from juveniles to gravid females, indicating lipids to be an energy source during maturation and reproduction. The weight-specific female investment in reproduction increases with body size. In gravid females, intersegmental growth during brooding period was observed, while males appear to store energy only for copulation and die after mating. Ontogenetic variation in body composition has implications for elemental budgets of M. mixta, its value as prey for fish and in modeling energy and nutrient cycling.

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