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Sexual and asexual reproduction in a Mediterranean Tethya (Porifera, Demospongiae) species
Mastrodonato, M.; Scillitani, G.; Trani, R.; Cardone, F.; Corriero, G.; Nonnis-Marzano, C. (2022). Sexual and asexual reproduction in a Mediterranean Tethya (Porifera, Demospongiae) species. BMC Zoology 7: 41. https://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40850-022-00142-9
In: BMC Zoology. BMC: London. e-ISSN 2056-3132, more
Peer reviewed article  

Available in  Authors 

Keywords
    Tethya Lamarck, 1815 [WoRMS]
    Marine/Coastal
Author keywords
    Reproductive cycle, Tethya, Mediterranean Sea, Buds, Spermatic cysts

Authors  Top 
  • Mastrodonato, M.
  • Scillitani, G.
  • Trani, R.
  • Cardone, F.
  • Corriero, G.
  • Nonnis-Marzano, C.

Abstract

    Background

    The reproductive cycle of the recently described sponge Tethya meloni was investigated for a period of 15 months (September 2018 – November 2019) in the Mar Piccolo of Taranto (Southern Italy) and was compared with data previously collected for the other two sympatric species of the same genus known for Mediterranean Sea, T. citrina and T. aurantium.

    Results

    T. meloni is a gonochoric species with a sex ratio strongly shifted towards females. Asexual budding was a seasonal process, limited to few specimens. In a specimen collected in September 2018 both oocytes and buds occurred, suggesting that in T. meloni the sexual and asexual phases may coexist both at the population and individual levels.

    Conclusions

    The data obtained from this research compared with the available literature confirm the high temporal variability of the reproductive cycles in the Mediterranean species of Tethya, but with common general characteristics. In sexual reproduction, the oocyte production period lasts several months, with a peak between summer and autumn while spermatogenesis, shorter but with greater reproductive effort, follows the onset of oogenesis. The asexual reproduction phase of T. meloni, on the other hand, occurs in a short period and seems to have less importance in the overall reproductive process.


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