Brief Exposure to Turbulence Permanently Alters Development of Sand Dollar Larvae

Matthew C. Ferner1, Jason Hodin2, Gabriel Ng3, Christopher J. Lowe2 and Brian Gaylord3, (1)San Francisco Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve, Tiburon, CA, United States, (2)Stanford University, Hopkins Marine Station, Pacific Grove, CA, United States, (3)University of California at Davis, Bodega Marine Laboratory and Department of Evolution and Ecology, Bodega Bay, CA, United States
Abstract:
Fluid motion underlies interactions between animals and their environment through effects on locomotion, food capture, respiration, information transfer, and other processes. Recent studies of marine invertebrates indicate that metamorphosis and settlement can be altered when swimming larvae experience a change in turbulence intensity, possibly increasing the likelihood that larvae will settle in appropriate habitat. For example, brief exposure to levels of turbulence characteristic of wave-swept coasts causes echinoderm larvae to quickly transition from a non-responsive "pre-competent" stage into a "competent" stage, thereby allowing the larvae to respond to local cues and settle. However, responding to one’s entry into the nearshore environment isn’t enough, as many such species live as adults in a narrower range of highly specific benthic habitat that is even more rarely encountered. Here we provide an account for this apparent mismatch between larval responses to broadly distributed cues and their need for more specialized settlement locations: turbulence exposure seems to cause larval sand dollars (Dendraster excentricus) to permanently shift from pre-competence to competence. This observation suggests a scenario where turbulence can activate a temporally extensive search image in larvae over a broad habitat range, a seemingly adaptive feature for larvae entering dynamic coastal environments.