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Extraordinary prolongation of the life cycle in a freshwater planktonic copepod
25
Citations
25
References
1981
Year
BiologyExtraordinary ProlongationBenthic-pelagic CouplingZooplankton EcologyNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyTemperate LakeFreshwater Planktonic CopepodWater BiologyAquatic OrganismLife CycleLimnologyProlonged Life Cycle
The limnetic copepod Cyclops scutifer Sars shows an extraordinarily prolonged life cycle in a temperate lake near Oslo, Norway. Developmental sequences become one, two, and three years old, and there are circumstantial evidence of a four year old fraction. Prolongation of the cycle is mainly caused by two consecutive periods of diapause, the first as small copepodids during the second winter, the other as large copepodids during the third winter. There is a marked concentration of diapausing individuals in a small area of the bottom at the deepest part of the lake. There is evidence that this concentration is caused by a horizontal migration to areas with optimal oxygen conditions. The adaptive value of a prolongation of the life cycle is assumed to be an increase in the reproductive potential caused by a spreading out of the reproductive period by three year classes succeeding each other throughout the summer.
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