2006
DOI: 10.1051/kmae:2006019
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The Fecundity, Time of Egg Development and Juvenile Production in Spiny-Cheek Crayfish (Orconectes Limosus) Under Controlled Conditions

Abstract: We comprehensively describe the fecundity and time of embryonic development of the spiny-cheek crayfish (Orconectes limosus). Linear relationships between female size and ovarian fecundity, pleopodal fecundity, and production of juveniles at the 3 rd stage, were confirmed. The ovarian fecundity was evaluated for the smallest as well as largest females in the sampled population (43-93 mm of body length); the number of oocytes (eggs) ranged widely, between 46 and 505. No significant difference was found between … Show more

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Cited by 28 publications
(18 citation statements)
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References 26 publications
(23 reference statements)
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“…Females in all mated groups produced eggs and hatched and carried viable offspring. The number of 2 nd developmental stage juveniles per female was high in all groups (Table 2) and was comparable to the literature [7], [20], [23]. This suggests that omitted or truncated mating periods, long-term sperm storage, and absence of chemical stimulation by males at the start of a mating season did not reduce fecundity, and, conversely, the completion of both mating periods had no positive influence on reproductive output.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 86%
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“…Females in all mated groups produced eggs and hatched and carried viable offspring. The number of 2 nd developmental stage juveniles per female was high in all groups (Table 2) and was comparable to the literature [7], [20], [23]. This suggests that omitted or truncated mating periods, long-term sperm storage, and absence of chemical stimulation by males at the start of a mating season did not reduce fecundity, and, conversely, the completion of both mating periods had no positive influence on reproductive output.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 86%
“…These features, common in the majority of Cambaridae, but specifically O. limosus consist of early maturation enabling a short generation cycle [22], [34], [35]; high fecundity even of small females maximizing numbers of offspring [23], [36], [37]; periodic occurrence of morphologically distinct sexually active (form I) and sexually inactive forms (form II) in males and females providing a mechanism to utilize resources effectively in the most important life stages [24], [25], [38], [39]; autumn and spring mating maximizing the probability of successful mating [22], [33], [37], [40]; the capability of sperm storage to circumvent extreme conditions [7], [41], [42]; and parthenogenesis as a tool for alternative reproduction if males are not available [17].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Several publications have focused on fecundity of this crayfish (STUCKI, 2000;HAMR, 2002;KOZÁK et al, 2006). In Québec populations, mating takes place in September-October and again in March-April (HAMR, 2002).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Spiny-cheek crayfish were the earliest exotic crayfish introduced into Europe, and the first to bring in crayfish fungal plague, and are now widespread in lower quality habitats, chiefly deep rivers (Souty-Grosset et al, 2006). O. limosus is more active by day than are native astacids, and fecundity is also higher, with shorter development times (Kozák et al, 2006). Haertel-Borer et al (2005) studied the impact of O. limosus on European lake communities.…”
Section: > Spiny-cheek Crayfish Orconectes Limosusmentioning
confidence: 99%