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Evolutionary Biology and Ecology of Ostracoda, p. 141-148

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-017-1508-9_11

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The effect of temperature on shell size and growth rate in Krithe praetexta praetexta (Sars)

Journal article published in 2000 by Stefan Majoran, S. Agrenius, M. Kucera ORCID
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

The effect of temperature on growth rate, shell size and shell shape in Krithe praetexta praetexta (Sars) was studied in four thermocultures. From July 1995 to June 1996, the cultures were kept in a continuously flowing open system pumping water from the intermediate watermass of the Gullmarn fjord, west coast of Sweden. Three cultures were kept at constant temperatures of 5, 10 and 14 C, respectively. The fourth (reference) culture largely followed the natural variation in temperature. At the termination of the experiment, all living ostracods from a 125 m sieve were sampled from the cultures. Population age structures were analysed for the various thermocultures of K. praetexta praetexta. These were more shifted towards later ontogenetic stages with higher temperature, i.e. the ontogenetic development was more rapid in the warmer cultures. An alternative explanation is due to diapause causing cohorts to accumulate in some ontogenetic stages only when the temperature is constant. The differences in shell size of K. praetexta praetexta among the thermoconstant cultures were not statistically significant.