Abstract

In three Clunio stocks, two from the Mediterranean Sea (Banyuls, Rovinj) and one from the Black Sea (Sosopol), an identical circasemilunar eclosion pattern in combination with a circadian eclosion time of day was evoked in breeding experiments under an artificial moonlight cycle (four nights of 0.3 lux every 30 d, 12 h light:12 h dark). The eclosion peaks occurred on days with artificial moonlight and approximately 2 weeks later, and with regard to the time of day between mid-night and lights-on. In spite of the weak tidal amplitudes on Mediterranean shores, extreme low water levels occur when a nocturnal low-water time coincides on days around full and new moon (spring-tide situation) with winds from land to sea. Field observations at Banyuls and Rovinj agree with the experimental results. In contrast to Clunio spp. adults (life span only a few hours), Thalassomyia frauenfeldi adults (life span up to several days in the laboratory) demonstrated an unsynchronized eclosion pattern in the experiments (no lunar concentration, wide diurnal eclosion gate). Although inhabiting the same intertidal area, T. frauenfeldi walking on exposed intertidal substrates can delay egg-deposition for days and can probably wait for favorable low water levels. The taxonomical status of European Clunio populations is reviewed; minute morphological distinctions are presented for C. mediterraneus in the otherwise morphologically uniform, but ecophysiologically differentiated genus.

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