Kurt Paschke
Austral University of Chile
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Featured researches published by Kurt Paschke.
Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology | 1999
Paulina Gebauer; Kurt Paschke; Klaus Anger
When the megalopa stage of estuarine crab species becomes competent for settlement and metamorphosis, it responds to specific chemical and physical cues from the adult environment. Delayed metamorphosis in the absence of such cues is beneficial insofar as it increases the probability of finding a suitable habitat, and it may also enhance the genetic exchange between separate populations. However, this developmental and behavioural response may incur energetic costs reducing the fitness of later life-history stages. In a laboratory investigation, we studied postmetamorphic consequences of delayed metamorphosis for growth and survival in early juvenile instars (I through V) of an estuarine grapsid crab, Chasmagnathus granulata (Dana, 1851). In competent megalopa larvae of this species, metamorphosis is induced by chemical cues from muddy substrates and conspecific adults (control treatment). After delayed metamorphosis in the absence of these cues (experimental treatment), survival and body size were significantly reduced in the first crab stage, and the duration of development to the second juvenile instar was significantly longer. Survival, moult-cycle duration, and percentage growth increments were not significantly affected in later juvenile instars. However, as a consequence of the initial reduction in development and growth, the crabs from the experimental treatment remained consistently smaller and moulted later to successive instars than in the control group. Our results indicate that delayed metamorphosis is associated with a reduced postmetamorphic fitness in an estuarine crab species.
Revista Chilena de Historia Natural | 2003
Paulina Gebauer; Kurt Paschke; Klaus Anger
Most marine invertebrate species exhibit a complex life cycle including a planktonic larval phase and a benthic juvenile-adult phase. Metamorphosis and settlement are the links between these phases of development. In many species, metamorphosis is triggered by specific chemical and/or physical cues, mainly associated with the adult habitat. In the absence of such cues. competent larvae can delay their metamorphosis by a few days to several months. Most investigations on the delay of metamorphosis have been realised on sessile or sedentary species. In relation to mobile decapod crustaceans. the number of such studies is low, probably because the members of this group retain their mobility after metamorphosis. and hence, may depend less on environmental cues for the induction of settlement and metamorphosis. Nevertheless. the larvae of some decapod species have been shown to depend on metamorphosis-stimulating cues. These include special types of substrates, physical or chemical traits of particular (e.g., estuarine) water bodies, as well as odors from conspecific or congeneric adults. The capacity for delay is, in the decapod species studied so far, limited and may normally end with spontaneous metamorphosis. An extended time of larval development presents the advantage of enhancing the probability for locating a suitable habitat, but it may imply, as a disadvantage, a reduction of juvenile growth or survival and a prolonged development time preceding benthic life. This paper reviews the available evidence for delayed metamorphosis in decapod crustaceans, indentifed cues, the importance of larval age at the time of contact with a cue, and costs of delayed metamorphosis. Additionally, we propose new frontiers for future investigations on delayed metamorphosis in decapod crustaceans, including the molecular identification of chemical cues, the identification of the stage(s) of the moulting cycle that is or are sensitive to such cues, the study of hormonally mediated effects on the moulting cycle, the quantification of energetic or other costs of delayed metamorphosis, and the analysis of relationships between the effectiveness of adult odors and phylogenetic proximity of larvae and adults.
Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology | 2002
Paulina Gebauer; Kurt Paschke; Klaus Anger
The larvae of many marine invertebrate species are able to delay their settlement and metamorphosis in the absence of characteristic cues from the adult habitat. This phenomenon was experimentally studied in the megalopa stage of Sesarma curacaoense de Man, 1892, a semiterrestrial grapsid crab that lives in the shallow coastal mangrove habitats in the Caribbean region. Duration of the development and survival to metamorphosis to the first juvenile crab stage were compared between experimental treatments, where the water was conditioned with adult crabs (“adult-conditioned water,” ACW) and control groups reared in filtered seawater. In the experiments with larvae from two different females, development duration was significantly shorter and mortality lower in water conditioned with conspecific adults. In the two control groups, the effects of supply with an artificial substrate (nylon gauze) were tested. This comparison showed that the presence of substrate did not significantly influence the time to metamorphosis, but did reduce the mortality rate. In all later experiments, the megalopae were thus routinely provided with nylon gauze as a substrate. In each of the three subsequent replicate experiments conducted with larvae from different females, survival rate and development time to metamorphosis were compared between one control group and four treatments with ACW. The effectiveness of conspecific (S. curacaoense) adult odors as metamorphosis-stimulating cue was, in these experiments, compared with that of ACW from one congener (S. rectum) and two species belonging to different genera within the Grapsidae (Armases miersii, Chasmagnathus granulata). While the rate of survival showed inconsistent patterns among repeated experiments, the development was consistently fastest with conspecific ACW, followed by ACW from S. rectum, A. miersii and C. granulata. Only the conspecific and congeneric cues had statistically significant effects (i.e. shorter development than in the controls). These response patterns suggest that chemically similar factors (presumably pheromones) are produced by closely related species and, thus, their chemical structure may reflect phylogenetical relationships within a clade.
The Biological Bulletin | 2010
Iker Uriarte; Jorge Hernández; Jessica Dörner; Kurt Paschke; Ana Farías; Enzo Crovetto; Carlos Rosas
Globally, octopus larviculture is one of the challenges faced in the attempt to diversify aquaculture and achieve cephalopod farming. Currently, only juveniles of Octopus vulgaris, Octopus joubini, and Enteroctopus dofleini have been obtained at an experimental level. This is the first study to look at the characteristics of planktonic and benthic Robsonella fontaniana juveniles in an effort to analyze the morphometric changes occurring during their planktonic and benthic phases and to explore the feasibility of obtaining settlement under controlled conditions. The morphometric measurements varied exponentially over time and did not show different tendencies before and after settlement. Mantle growth in relation to total length fit a logarithmic regression, whereas arm length and eye diameter increased linearly with respect to total length throughout the entire paralarval and juvenile periods. This suggests that the size of the mantle decreases with age in proportion to the total octopus length, whereas the organs more directly involved in catching prey tend to increase in direct proportion to the total length. The present study shows that R. fontaniana can be reared from hatching through the final paralarval stage on a diet of Lithodes santolla (king crab) zoeae; after settlement, the juveniles can be reared on a diet of crab such as Petrolisthes.
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology A-molecular & Integrative Physiology | 2013
Mauricio A. Urbina; Kurt Paschke; Paulina Gebauer; Juan Pablo Cumillaf; Carlos Rosas
The recent demand for live seafood has made Lithodes santolla a potential candidate for the live crab market. Since live transport implies long aerial exposure times, the present study determined the tolerance of L. santolla to aerial exposure and also explored the physiological status of L. santolla after six different aerial exposure times: 0, 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50h. No mortalities were recorded during emersion periods shorter than 40 h, however, all hemolymph parameters were modulated by aerial exposure. Hemolymph dissolved oxygen and pH were inversely related with the aerial exposure time (-0.016 mg L(-1) h(-1) and -0.018 h(-1), respectively), while oxyhemocyanin and hemolymph protein were positively correlated (0.006 mmol L(-1) h(-1) and 0.487 mg mL(-1) h(-1), respectively). Oxygen consumption at re-immersion was affected by aerial exposure time, with low values in animals emersed for longer than 30 h. We postulate that the unexpected high tolerance of L. santolla to aerial exposure is mainly related to adaptations to hypoxia, developed to overcome hypoxic events in their natural environment in deep water. The present findings are not only important for understanding L. santollas physiology, but also provide the first evaluation of the potential marketing of southern king crab as live seafood.
Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom | 2010
Mauricio Urbina; Kurt Paschke; Paulina Gebauer; Oscar R. Chaparro
Hemigrapsus crenulatus is an abundant and frequent decapod crustacean inhabiting estuarine environments, where it must tolerate large shifts in salinity. The present study evaluates the effect of salinity (5, 13, 21 and 30 psu) on the adult physiological processes related to the energy balance. The growth potential (SFG) and the respired oxygen:excreted nitrogen ratio were used as indices of stress. Ingestion, excretion and respiration rates showed a significant dependence on salinity, being higher at low salinities. The assimilation efficiency remained constant along the studied salinity gradient. The assimilation and ingestion rates were inversely related with the salinity. Given this scenario, the growth potential remained constant within the studied salinity gradient, as did the oxygen:nitrogen ratio. The results suggest that the increased energy losses at low salinity due to respiration and excretion are compensated by an increment in the ingestion rate, contributing to the success of H. crenulatus in dynamic habitats such as estuaries.
Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology | 2001
Oscar R. Chaparro; C.L Saldivia; Kurt Paschke
Incubation is thought to increase embryonic survival in numerous groups of marine invertebrates. This paper considers whether the production of gametes and physical space involved in capsular incubation limits brooding capacity in Crepidula fecunda, a marine gastropod from the coast of Chile. C. fecunda females spawned only mature eggs, leaving immature eggs within the gonad. Average oocyte area was significantly different (P<0.05) between nonincubating females, those at terminal incubation (with advanced veligers), and those containing a pinnotherid crab, compared to females in early stages of incubation. Over the period of brooding, the area occupied by the capsules increased, and the area of the foot of the incubating female was gradually reduced. C. fecunda females that hosted a pinnotherid crab in the incubation space did not lay eggs during the 12-month study period. Addition of a pinnotherid to the incubation area completely inhibited oviposition. Addition of a crab-sized piece of parafilm inhibited the process in more than 80% of females, while none of the females from which the pinnotherid was eliminated failed to deposit egg capsules within the 5-week study period. This suggests that any material filling the brood space inhibits deposition of egg capsules.
Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom | 2007
Paulina Gebauer; Kurt Paschke; C. A. Moreno
The present study describes the reproductive cycle and population structure of the intertidal crab Petrolisthes laevigatus, an abundant inhabitant of the upper rocky intertidal zone, as well as the relationship between seasonal patterns in the release of its planktonic larvae and recruiting. A total of 22 900 individuals was collected along the coast of southern Chile between May 2001 and March 2003. The structure and density of the adult population (males and females) was relatively constant throughout the study period, although seasonal variations were observed in these two parameters of the benthic population (males, females, juveniles and megalopae), principally due to the incorporation of new individuals (recruitment) into the intertidal zone. Petrolisthes laevigatus presented a prolonged reproductive period. Females with initial eggs were present from the end of summer through to the middle of the following summer (11 months) and the breeding season lasted seven months (from August to February), as re£ected in the six months of intertidal settlement (October^ March). The interannual patterns and variations observed in the settlement along the southern Chilean coastline were related to the patterns in the abundance of potential released planktonic larvae. Petrolisthes laevigatus, unlike most temperate species, has a broad reproductive and settlement period in the south of Chile, which allows a highly stable structure and population abundance in this intertidal zone.
Biology Open | 2016
Juan Pablo Cumillaf; Johnny Blanc; Kurt Paschke; Paulina Gebauer; Fernando Díaz; Denisse Re; María Eugenia Chimal; Jorge Vásquez; Carlos Rosas
ABSTRACT Optimum temperatures can be measured through aerobic scope, preferred temperatures or growth. A complete thermal window, including optimum, transition (Pejus) and critical temperatures (CT), can be described if preferred temperatures and CT are defined. The crustacean Hemigrapsus crenulatus was used as a model species to evaluate the effect of acclimation temperature on: (i) thermal preference and width of thermal window, (ii) respiratory metabolism, and (iii) haemolymph proteins. Dependant on acclimation temperature, preferred temperature was between 11.8°C and 25.2°C while CT was found between a minimum of 2.7°C (CTmin) and a maximum of 35.9°C (CTmax). These data and data from tropical and temperate crustaceans were compared to examine the association between environmental temperature and thermal tolerance. Temperate species have a CTmax limit around 35°C that corresponded with the low CTmax limit of tropical species (34–36°C). Tropical species showed a CTmin limit around 9°C similar to the maximum CTmin of temperate species (5–6°C). The maximum CTmin of deep sea species that occur in cold environments (2.5°C) matched the low CTmin values (3.2°C) of temperate species. Results also indicate that the energy required to activate the enzyme complex (Ei) involved in respiratory metabolism of ectotherms changes along the latitudinal gradient of temperature. Summary: The preferred temperature of the intertidal temperate crab Hemigrapsus crenulatus was determined to be between 12°C and 25°C. Oceanic warming would trap this species between tropical and polar temperatures, causing increasing population stress with unknown ecological consequences.
Marine and Freshwater Behaviour and Physiology | 2015
Sergio Padilla-Ramírez; Fernando Díaz; Ana Denisse Re; Clara E. Galindo-Sánchez; Ana Lorena Sanchez-Lizarraga; Luis Antonio Nuñez-Moreno; Dalia Moreno-Sierra; Kurt Paschke; Carlos Rosas
The preferred temperature of Cancer antennarius determined with the acute method was 15.2 °C, and with the gravitation method was 15.9 ± 1.9 in the day cycle and 13.2 ± 0.6 °C in the night cycle. The critical thermal maximum increased as the acclimation temperature was increased (p < 0.05); the thermal tolerance interval was 1.3, indicating that this species has a low tolerance indicative that it has evolved in highly stable environments. The acclimation response ratio for adults had an interval of 0.10–0.30. These values allow us to characterize this species as inhabiting cold and temperate regions. The oxygen consumption rates increased significantly (p < 0.05) from 6.57 to 9.92.0 mg O2 kg−1 h−1 wet weight as the acclimation temperature increased from 15 to 24 °C. The range of temperature coefficient (Q10) between 15 and 18 °C was the lower than 1.70 and corresponds with the intervals of preferred temperature.