Abstract

The larvae of the Indo-Pacific gastropod Conns textile Linné were reared in the laboratory from hatching through metamorphosis. Larvae fed a mixed phytoplankton culture of Isochrysis galbana and Phaeodactylum tricornutum grew at a rate of 0.06 mm/day and began metamorphosing 16 days after hatching. Unfed control cultures yielded no metamorphically competent larvae. Laboratory-reared larvae metamorphosed spontaneously on the walls of the fïberglass rearing tanks when their average shell length was 1.5 mm. Measurements made on field-collected Conns textile juveniles indicate that the larvae metamorphose at the same size in the laboratory as they do in nature. Rates of larval shell length increase and dry weight increase paralleled each other until metamorphosis. At this point, shell growth slowed while dry weight increased suddenly. It is suggested that this weight increase reflects calcification and strengthening of the fragile larval shell upon entering the benthic environment.

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