Abstract

Unlike most embryos that hatch on a predetermined timetable, California Grunion Leuresthes tenuis can prolong the embryonic period up to three times longer than the time required for hatching readiness. L. tenuis are teleosts that spawn tidally around the highest spring tides of spring and summer, incubating eggs above the water line. Embryos are competent to hatch in 10 days, however they do not hatch until triggered by an environmental cue, agitation in seawater, as the next spring tides rise. This study examined the growth and survival of L. tenuis embryos and larvae that were all fertilized on the same day, then triggered to hatch after different durations of incubation, up to 35 days post fertilization. L. tenuis embryos that survive extended incubation had decreased yolk reserves and did not advance appreciably in morphological development, even when incubation time was extended to its upper limit. After extended incubation, length of hatchlings was significantly longer than hatchlings from the primary incubation time. Regardless of the duration of incubation, larvae provided food ad libitum grew rapidly and were not significantly different in length at three weeks post hatch. Dry mass increased over time and was not significantly different between larval groups within any post-hatch age. Larval growth and survival after one additional tidal cycle of incubation are not adversely affected, but longer incubation significantly decreases embryonic and larval survival. Large reproductive output, environmentally cued hatching, and plasticity in incubation duration enable L. tenuis to reproduce successfully in the unpredictable sandy intertidal ecosystem.

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