Abstract
The neotropical amphidromous shrimp Macrobrachium acanthurus is one of various freshwater crustaceans heavily exploited in the southwestern Atlantic. Fecundity (nº early embryos female−1) was examined during 2007 at four different localities (Iguape, Registro, Sete Barras, and Eldorado) along a stretch of river extending over 85 km (Ribeira de Iguape, São Paulo State, Brazil). Also, fertility (nº hatched larvae female−1) was examined at one locality (Registro) during 2009–2010. Fecundity (mean ± SD: 5191 ± 2635; range: 1086–13,014 embryos female−1) did not vary throughout the segment of river studied. Fecundity increased with female body size (carapace length, CL). However, fecundity scaled negatively with shrimp body size; females produce disproportionably fewer eggs with a unit increase in CL. The conditions explaining the negative allometric relationship between fecundity and female body size in M. acanthurus remain to be addressed. Nevertheless, natural food constraints limiting the ability of large but not small females to acquire enough resources to produce and fill their gonads with oocytes represents a plausible explanation for the negative scaling of fecundity with body size. Fertility varied between 545 and 12,465 hatched larvae female−1 with an average (±SD) of 3981 (± 2693) and increased isometrically with a unit increase in female body size. M. acanthurus has an average fecundity and fertility that represents one of the extremes regarding the trade-off between fecundity/fertility and egg-size reported for caridean shrimps. All of this information needs to be considered in assessing shrimp stocks and establishing a sustainable management plan for this exploited species in the southwestern Atlantic.
Acknowledgments
GB thanks the FAPESP (Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo) for providing financial support (05/56131-0). We also thank students and technicians for their help during field work. Sampling was conducted according to the São Paulo state and Brazilian federal laws. J.A.B. is most grateful to Maria Lucia Negreiros-Fransozo, Paula Araujo, Adilson Fransozo, Alexandre Oliveira de Almeida, and the Sociedade Brasileira de Carcinologia that made possible his visit to Brazil during 2010 and this collaboration. We also thank two anonymous reviewers for comments on the manuscript. This is contribution number 946 of the Smithsonian Marine Station at Fort Pierce.