Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-5wvtr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-19T06:21:26.989Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Rissoid Larvæ as Food of the Young Herring. The Eggs and Larvæ of the Plymouth Rissoidæ

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 May 2009

Marie V. Lebour
Affiliation:
Naturalist at the Plymouth Laboratory.

Extract

The free-swimming young of the Rissoidse are particularly important in the plankton for there is always one or more species present in any month and they usually occur in great abundance. The various species live between tide-marks, in the laminarian and coralline zones and in deeper water in several fathoms depth; wherever tow-nettings are taken they usually contain some species of this family. The inshore waters, however, are the richest in rissoids. Even in winter certain species are common round the Plymouth coasts. Some years ago it was found that very young herring just before losing the yolk-sac and about a fortnight old had been eating small rissoids, evidently almost newly hatched (Plate I, Fig. 1). The herring up to a length of about 12 mm. and just after the yolk-sac had disappeared altogether continued to eat them but usually after this size they ate only small Crustacea. From 1917 to 1921 it was found that out of 140 young herring examined, 91 had fed on these small gastropods. In later years they were also found feeding on them (Lebour, 1921, 1924). Other minute planktonic organisms were eaten, including algæ, tintinnids, copepod and cirripede nauplii and very small adult copepods; also a minute bivalve larva but no other gastropod, although other veligers were present in the plankton, Patella being specially common. The young herrings hatch out from December to February, therefore these little gastropods must also hatch at this time and this proves to be the case for in the plankton there are large numbers of these very young veligers (Plate I, Figs. 7–8). Later on, in spring, older stages of the same mollusc abound and are quite the commonest veligers in the plankton near the coast (Plate I, Figs. 17–19). In the summer they have almost entirely disappeared.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 1934

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

LITERATURE

Caullery, M. and Pelseneer, P. 1910. Sur La Ponte et le développement du Vignot. Bull. Sci. de la France et de la Belgique, T. XLIV, 4th fasc.Google Scholar
Fischer, H. 1892. Recherches sur la Morphologie du Foie des Gasteropodes. Bull. Sci. France et Belgique, XXIV (4), Vol, III, pp. 260346.Google Scholar
Forbes, E. and Hanley, S. 1853. A History of the British Mollusca, Vol. III, pp. 1616; Vol. IV, pp, 1–300 and plates.Google Scholar
Jeffreys, G. 1867. British Conchology, Vol. IV, pp. 1486; Vol. V, plates.Google Scholar
Lamy, E. 1928. La Ponte chez les Gastéropodes prosobranches. Journ. de Conchyliologie, Vol. LXXII, pp. 25196.Google Scholar
Lebour, M. V. 1921. The Food of Young Clupeoids. Jour. Mar. Biol. Assoc., N.S. Vol. XII, No. 3, pp. 458467, 06.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lebour, M. V. 1924. The Food of Young Herring. Jour. Mar. Biol. Assoc., Vol. XIII, No. 2, pp. 325330, 11.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lovén, S. 1846. Index Molluscorum Litora Scandinaviæ occidentalia Habitantium. Fauna Prodromus. K. Vet. Atad. Fôrh, pp. 150.Google Scholar
Pelseneer, P. 1911. Recherches sur l'Embryologie des Gasteropodes. Mem. de l'Acad. Roy. de Belgique, 2me Sér., T. III, pp. 1167.Google Scholar
PlymouthMarineFauna. 1931. Second Edition. Marine Biological Association.Google Scholar
Powell, A. W. B. 1930. New Species of New Zealand Mollusca from Shallow-water Dredgings. Trans, and Proc. New Zealand Institute, Vol. 60, Pt. 4, 12, 1929, pp. 532543.Google Scholar
Thiele, J. 1929. Handbuch der Systematisches Weichtierkunde, Part I, pp. 1778.Google Scholar
Winckwobth, R. 1932. The British Marine Mollusca. Journ. of Conchology, XIX, No. 7, 06, pp. 211252.Google Scholar