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Fertilization ecology and egg size evolution in broadcast-spawning organisms
A major goal of life-history theory is to understand how ecological forces shape the optimal tradeoff between offspring size and number. We are interested in how variable conditions during broadcast spawning and planktonic development, the most common mode of marine reproduction, influence the evolution of egg traits and the optimal size-number balance. To understand forces acting on the evolution of egg size, work in the lab addresses both pre-zygotic and post-zygotic consequences of changes in egg size. In earlier work I found that a pre-zygotic benefit of large size--an increase in the rate of collision between spawned gametes--is neither necessary nor sufficient to drive the evolution of large ova. One common feature of free spawned eggs, however, is a large and inexpensive accessory coat. Egg coats alter both chemical and physical properties (size and density) of a spawned egg that can influence sperm-egg contact. U sing a combination of fertilization experiments and quantitative models of fertilization kinetics, I am asking what role egg coats play in fertilization ecology and how they alter size-specific tradeoffs that govern resource allocation to individual offspring.Using sperm as an agent of selection, sand dollar eggs with larger overall target sizes (Fig. 1) were favored in
Christina Zakas, an undergraduate honors student in the lab working with Jon, carried the analysis to the next life-history stage by asking whether the effects of egg size and larval feeding experience carry over into effects on juvenile growth and survival. This analysis was done with Clypeaster rosaceus, a sea urchin with an intermediate size egg and an unusual mode of development known as facultative planktotrophy. Larvae of C. rosaceus can feed but do not require food to complete larval development. Using blastomere separation, Christina generated egg sizes characteristic of species with obligate planktotrophy, which require feeding to complete larval development. Results of these experiments indicate a stronger effect of initial egg size than of feeding on size at metamorphosis and juvenile growth and survival. These results indicate how the egg, larval, and juvenile life history stages are functionally connected by different energetic strategies that fuel development using maternal nutrients vs. those acquired during larval feeding. |
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Biology Department | Biology Faculty | Grice Marine Laboratory | Grice Faculty |
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