Mariaglaja tsurugensis explained
Mariaglaja tsurugensis is a species of sea slug, or "headshield slug", a marine opisthobranch gastropod mollusk in the family Aglajidae.[1] This species lives from Tanzania to Australia.[2]
Ecology
Mariaglaja tsurugensis is a simultaneously hermaphroditic species. Contrary to classic theoretical predictions, Sprenger et al. (2011) have shown for the first time that the mating rate is largely unresponsive to variations in mate availability in this simultaneous hermaphrodite. With mating rates being close to the female fitness optimum, their findings challenge the prevailing notion of male-driven mating rates in simultaneous hermaphrodites, and call for complementary investigations of mating-rate effects on fitness through the male sexual function.
References
Further reading
- Anthes N., Putz A. & Michiels N. K. (2006). "Hermaphrodite sex role preferences: the role of partner body size, mating history and female fitness in the sea slug Chelidonura sandrana". Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 60(3): 359-367. .
- Rudman W. B. (1973). "On some species of Chelidonura (Opisthobranchia: Aglajidae) from Zanzibar and Fiji". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 52(3): 201-215. .
- Sprenger D., Anthes N. & Michiels N. K. (2008). "Multiple mating affects offspring size in the opisthobranch Chelidonura sandrana". Marine Biology 153(5): 891-897. .
Notes and References
- Mariaglaja tsurugensis. 1251040. 19 November 2024.
- Rudman W. B. (1998). "Chelidonura sandrana". Sea Slug Forum, accessed 25 may 2011.
- Sprenger D., Lange R. & Anthes N. (2011). "Population density and group size effects on reproductive behavior in a simultaneous hermaphrodite". BMC Evolutionary Biology 11: 107. .