Lobster aquaculture requires control of reproductive processes. We have previously described an electrical stimulation technique for collecting spermatophores from living lobsters (Homarus americanus). These spermatophores can potentially be used in a variety of ways including: 1) experimental manipulation of sperm, 2) artificial insemination of females, 3) sperm banking, and 4) evaluation of sperm production by the male. In this study, we evaluated spermatophore production and extrusion from: 1) laboratory reared H. americanus and H. gammarus, 2) stressed, wild‐caught H. americanus, and 3) laboratory bred and reared hybrid males from reciprocal interspecific crosses. Our results show that the extrusion technique can be used successfully on H. americanus, H. gammarus and hybrid males. Laboratory reared H. americanus and H. gammarus from both Aquaculture Enterprises and Bodega Marine Laboratory extruded spermatophores in 60–85% of all trials. The majority of these spermatophores were of high quality containing large sperm masses with morphologically normal sperm. Stressed H. americanus, obtained from a market in Sunset Beach, California, 24 hours after shipment from New England, extruded fewer spermatophores which were shorter in length and inferior in quality. Hybrid males extruded spermatophores possessing a morphologically normal wall, but lacking sperm. These results demonstrate that this electrical stimulation technique can be used to screen males for spermatophore production and identify certain types of infertility.
A technique has been developed for artificially inseminating freshly molted female lobsters (Homarus). Using the criterion that eggs were fertilized if they showed development of normal cleavage patterns, at least 49.5% of the inseminated females extruded fertilized eggs. Sixty‐two percent of the fertilized eggs developed to the eyespot stage, and 26.6% of these subsequently hatched. Eggs were not fertilized in 7.7% of the extrusions. In 42% of the samples, it was not possible to establish whether fertilization had occurred because either samples were collected prior to initiation of cleavage or eggs were too poorly preserved to assess cleavage with confidence. It is probable that many of the eggs that were evaluated as equivocal were also fertilized. This technique should be valuable in the experimental and commercial aquaculture of lobsters and might be directly applicable to other crustaceans.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.