Abstract

Melanerita atramentosa Reeve is active during high water and for a period after the ebb, until the substratum dries. A circatidal rhythm with an endogenous inequality between the diurnal and nocturnal high water activity is present in freshly collected snails placed under constant conditions (LL, 30 lux, temperature 21 °C, water level constant). The free-running period of the circatidal rhythm was approximately 24.3 h, slightly less than the tidal period of 24.8 h. This rhythm faded out after 4–6 days of constant conditions. Snails acclimated to non-tidal conditions were active at night. This rhythm persisted under constant conditions for 5–10 days, after which it too faded out. Shock-freezing re-initiated the circatidal rhythm, supporting a ‘multiple-clock’ hypothesis of control. Its limits entrainment are probably narrow, but an entrained periodicity persists for a number of cycles. A model of clock interaction and environmental influence is advanced.

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