Abstract

Summary A data gathering system controlled by microcomputer, recording swimming activity, is described. Prior to the breeding season, in a normal day and night regime, the delta prawn Palaemon longirostris shows a circadian swimming rhythm with peak activity at night. As the ovaries ripen and the prawns mate there is evidence of an additional tidal swimming rhythm. Females carrying eggs revert to nocturnal circadian swimming only. In ovigerous females the circadian swimming rhythm persists in continuous darkness with a free-running period of between 22 and 23 hours. The closely related and sympatric species Palaemonetes varians has similar patterns of swimming behaviour. It is suggested that the absence of newly hatched palaemonid larvae in the estuary is a result of the interaction of these adult swimming patterns with tidal flow and nocturnal hatching.

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