Abstract

The life history of Haloa japonica (Pilsbry), especially the seasonality of growth and reproduction, was investigated from 1992 to 1995 on a flat rocky shore exposed at low tide at Kattoshi, Hakodate Bay, Japan. To estimate the effect of environmental seasonality on growth rate, we conducted two sets of field cage experiments in which algal food was controlled. H. japonica was shown to have an annual life cycle. Spawning occurred from late April to mid-July. Recruitment occurred in June. Simultaneously, large adults disappeared from the habitat. A rapid increase in wet weight of H. japonica was observed in early spring, and coincided with the bloom of the membranous green alga, Monostroma angicava. Under field cage experiments, individuals feeding on both M. angicava and Polysiphonia japonica grew faster than those feeding on only P. japonica. Growth rates of H. japonica feeding on only P. japonica, however, did not vary from February to April. These results suggest that seasonal variation in the algal community limits the growth of H. japonica in early spring at Kattoshi. This factor is relatively more important as a limiting factor on the growth of H. japonica than the physical environment in this season.

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