New evidence of the copepod maternal food effects on reproduction
A.
Lacoste, S.A. Poulet, A. Cueff, G. Kattner, A. Ianora, M. Laabir-2001
Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology,
259(1): 85-107
Abstract:
Failure of female reproductive capacity in the
copepod Calanus helgolandicus was related to number and combination
of the phytoplankton species in the diets. The maternal food effects were
detectable at different levels: fecundity, oogenesis and hatching. Fecundity
and hatching were normal with two single (ca. Isochrysis galbana and Prorocentrum
minimum) and one mixed (Phaeodactylum tricornutum+Dunaliella
tertiolecta+Pavlova lutherii+I. galbana+P. minimum)
diets. With the single P. lutherii diet, fecundity decreased, but
hatching remained optimal. The daily egg production and hatching rates
decreased significantly in females fed the other single P. tricornutum,
D. tertiolecta and mixed (P. tricornutum+D. tertiolecta+P.
lutherii+I. galbana) diets, or starved. The fecundity decrease
coincided with gonad atresia, which was reversible when P. tricornutum
and P. lutherii diets were replaced by P. minimum diet. It was
irreversible when D. tertiolecta was replaced by P. minimum,
leading to female sterilization expressed by the deterioration of OS3 and
OS2 oocytes, as a function of the feeding duration. We assume that atresia
of female gonads was caused by the limitation of essential nutrients in
food, such as fatty acids, which induced catabolism and recycling of yolk
reserves and thus, maintenance of gonad integrity and low spawning rates.
With the D. tertiolecta diet, abnormally high increase of ornithine
concentrations in eggs showed that the ornithine metabolism and polyamine
pathway were affected during oogenesis, leading atresia of oocytes to be
deeply disturbed and followed up by necrosis of the gonads.
(Station Biologique de Roscoff, CNRS-UPMC-INSU, BP
74, Roscoff 29682, France, Tel.: +33-2-9829-2335; fax: +33-2-9829-2324,
e-mail of S.A. Poulet: poulet@sb-roscoff.fr)