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Biol. Bull. 206: 152-160. (June 2004)
© 2004 Marine Biological Laboratory

Fertilization in an Egg-Brooding Colonial Ascidian Does Not Vary With Population Density

Aimee Phillippi1,*, Ellen Hamann2 and Philip O. Yund1,{dagger}

1 School of Marine Sciences, Darling Marine Center, University of Maine, Walpole, Maine 04573
2 Biology Department, Augustana College, Sioux Falls, South Dakota 57197

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: aimeep{at}maine.edu

The possibility that free-spawning marine organisms may be subject to fertilization failure at low population density (due to the effects of sperm dilution) has sparked much interest, but these effects have been demonstrated only in a few species that broadcast their eggs. Some egg-brooding species may overcome dilution effects by filtering low concentrations of sperm from seawater and fertilizing eggs throughout an extended period of time. We examined the effects of population density and size on fertilization in Botryllus schlosseri, a hermaphroditic colonial ascidian that free-spawns sperm, but broods eggs. We experimentally manipulated the size and density of mating groups and surveyed fertilization levels in natural populations that varied in density. Fertilization was not affected by variation in population size or density in either the experimental or natural populations. Near the end of the reproductive season, some eggs may have been fertilized too late to complete development, suggesting a temporal form of sperm limitation that has not been considered in other systems. We also detected greater variability in fertilization levels at lower population density. Nevertheless, these results suggest that caution must be used in extrapolating reported density effects on fertilization to all taxa of free-spawners; density effects may be reduced in brooders that have efficient sperm collection mechanisms.




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