Brooding behaviour of the northern sea star Leptasterias polaris

1982 ◽  
Vol 68 (3) ◽  
pp. 235-240 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. H. Himmelman ◽  
Y. Lavergne ◽  
A. Cardinal ◽  
G. Martel ◽  
P. Jalbert
2004 ◽  
Vol 146 (5) ◽  
pp. 887-894 ◽  
Author(s):  
Myles Thompson ◽  
David Drolet ◽  
John H. Himmelman

1986 ◽  
Vol 64 (6) ◽  
pp. 1249-1253 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark J. Grygier

The ascothoracid parasite Dendrogaster is reported from four boreal localities in the Western Hemisphere. Dendrogaster elegans Wagin infests the sea star Leptasterias polaris in Bristol Bay, Alaska, and in the Gulf of St. Lawrence; the eastern specimens have a shorter brood sac middle piece. A lectotype is selected and described for D. arctica Korschelt from L. groenlandica in the eastern Bering Sea; Siberian specimens previously assigned to this species differ from the type in many details. Immature specimens of an unidentified Dendrogaster species have been found in L. floccosa from the Davis Strait.


1992 ◽  
Vol 70 (9) ◽  
pp. 1723-1728 ◽  
Author(s):  
William B. Stickle ◽  
David W. Foltz ◽  
Masaya Katoh ◽  
Hong L. Nguyen

Genetic structure was studied in five sea star species with diverse patterns of reproduction. Eleven sea star samples from six locations in Alaska, representing five species and three genera in the family Asteriidae, were analyzed for allozyme variation at 16–25 loci. Levels of intra- and inter-population variation were determined for three brooding species (Leptasterias hexactis, Leptasterias epichlora, and Leptasterias polaris) and two free-spawning species with long planktonic larval periods (Evasterias troschelii and Pisaster ochraceus). Population divergence of L. epichlora (FST = 0.156) was much higher than that off. ochraceus (FST = 0.006) or E. troschelii (FST = 0.023). Earlier work in our laboratory found that L. hexactis also showed significant interpopulation differences in allele frequencies. Expected heterozygosity was 0.050 in E. troschelii, 0.083 in L. polaris, 0.092 in P. ochraceus, 0.135 in L. epichlora, and 0.151 in L. hexactis, and was unrelated to mode of reproduction.


2020 ◽  
Vol 637 ◽  
pp. 59-69 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Sullivan-Stack ◽  
BA Menge

Top predator decline has been ubiquitous across systems over the past decades and centuries, and predicting changes in resultant community dynamics is a major challenge for ecologists and managers. Ecological release predicts that loss of a limiting factor, such as a dominant competitor or predator, can release a species from control, thus allowing increases in its size, density, and/or distribution. The 2014 sea star wasting syndrome (SSWS) outbreak decimated populations of the keystone predator Pisaster ochraceus along the Oregon coast, USA. This event provided an opportunity to test the predictions of ecological release across a broad spatial scale and determine the role of competitive dynamics in top predator recovery. We hypothesized that after P. ochraceus loss, populations of the subordinate sea star Leptasterias sp. would grow larger, more abundant, and move downshore. We based these predictions on prior research in Washington State showing that Leptasterias sp. competed with P. ochraceus for food. Further, we predicted that ecological release of Leptasterias sp. could provide a bottleneck to P. ochraceus recovery. Using field surveys, we found no clear change in density or distribution in Leptasterias sp. populations post-SSWS, and decreases in body size. In a field experiment, we found no evidence of competition between similar-sized Leptasterias sp. and P. ochraceus. Thus, the mechanisms underlying our predictions were not in effect along the Oregon coast, which we attribute to differences in habitat overlap and food availability between the 2 regions. Our results suggest that response to the loss of a dominant competitor can be unpredictable even when based in theory and previous research.


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