Abstract

The Florida stone crab, Menippe mercenaria, is an economically and ecologically important species that ranges from North Carolina throughout the Caribbean and the southeastern Gulf of Mexico. However, there is little known about its early life history stages as compared to other commercially important species in the region. The goal of this research was to examine effects of putative cues on metamorphosis from the megalopa stage to the first juvenile stage. Our study investigated the effect of water-soluble exudates from four substrata, as well as natural biofilms, and exudates from adult stone crabs. In addition, the influence of natural substrata was compared to that of artificial substrata. Adult exudate had no significant effect on metamorphosis, despite a wide range of tested concentrations. In contrast, there was a significant effect on mean time to metamorphosis in experimental groups exposed to multiple cues associated with the brown alga Sargassum fluitans, rubble from stone crab habitat, the eastern oyster Crassostrea virginica, and biofilms associated with the oyster. Furthermore, we provide evidence for metamorphic responses to water-soluble chemical cues, as well as biochemical and physical cues associated with different substrata. Overall results were coherent with the relevant body of previous work on metamorphosis of brachyuran crab larvae and indicate that both physical and chemical cues are important factors in facilitating the settlement and metamorphosis of M. mercenaria larvae in juvenile nursery habitat.

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