Abstract
Some pairs of oyster species in the genus Crassostrea can produce viable hybrids, and heterospecific fertilization may be symmetric, asymmetric, or very low. For example, with C. angulata and C. gigas, fertilization is equally successful whether the mature oocytes come from the first or the second species. Fertilization is asymmetric between C. ariakensis and C. virginica, i.e., it is higher when C. ariakensis is the source of the oocytes. Fertilization success is low between C. ariakensis and C. gigas. These differences probably relate chiefly to molecular mechanisms of gamete recognition, but the present study examines whether the size and certain aspects of gamete morphology may also play a role. Individuals of four species of the genus Crassostrea (Ostreidae: Bivalvia), collected from different geographic regions between 2006 and 2011, C. angulata (Penghu Island, Taiwan Strait), C. ariakensis (Nha Trang Bay, South China Sea), C. gigas (Peter the Great Bay, Sea of Japan), and C. virginica (Galveston Bay, Gulf of Mexico), were examined for conspecific relationships between the thickness of the vitelline envelope in mature oocytes and the size of the acrosome or subacrosomal spaces in spermatozoa. Thicker vitelline envelopes corresponded with bigger acrosomes and subacrosomal spaces in three of the four species. The exception was C. gigas, which has the thickest vitelline envelope, but the lytic compartments in its spermatozoa are not the largest. Moreover, sizes of acrosome, subacrosomal space, and vitelline envelope are similar between the species with symmetric heterospecific fertilization, while difference in sizes of these structures increases the possibility of asymmetric cross-fertilization or decreased fertilization rate.
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