Abstract

The larvae of many benthic marine invertebrates settle to form conspecific aggregations and are thought to rely on chemical cues associated with adults as indicators of habitat suitability, although the identification of inductive compounds has proven difficult. Still-water laboratory assays carried out during the summers of 1992 and 1993 with larvae of the serpulid polychaete, Hydroides dianthus (Verrill, 1873), demonstrate that unidentified water-borne compound(s) were responsible for gregarious settlement of competent larvae. Unlike inductive compounds associated with other tube-dwelling polychaetes, the settlement cue was soluble in water and was not associated with the tube, but rather with the body of live adults. In assay chambers divided by a 52-μm mesh barrier, a greater percentage of larvae settled on biofilmed substrata when adult worms were present on the other side of the barrier than when adults were absent. Settlement in response to conspecific adults, live worms removed from their tubes, and amputated tentacular crowns of live worms was significantly greater than settlement in response to dead worms, empty tubes, or biofilmed slides. The settlement inducer appears to emanate from the openings of occupied tubes; settlement was greatest along the anterior two-fifths of the tube of living conspecific adults. A single adult was equally capable of eliciting a gregarious response as were five or 25 conspecifics, and newly settled juveniles began to elicit gregarious settlement after approximately 96 h. Extraction of aggregations of adult worms with organic solvents removed the inductive capacity of the tissue, and activity was found in both nonpolar and polar fractions of an extraction series.

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