See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/284802851 Breeding cycle of pearl oysters Pinctada mazatlanica and Pteria sterna (Bivalvia:Pteriidae) at Bahia de la paz, Baja California Sur, Mexico Article in Journal of Shellfish Research · January 1997 CITATIONS READS 57 1,269 2 authors: Pedro E Saucedo Mario Monteforte-Sanchez Centro de Investigaciones Biológicas del Noroeste Centro de Investigaciones Biológicas del Noroeste 79 PUBLICATIONS 1,141 CITATIONS 57 PUBLICATIONS 887 CITATIONS SEE PROFILE Some of the authors of this publication are also working on these related projects: RFVIIa View project All content following this page was uploaded by Mario Monteforte-Sanchez on 06 September 2017. The user has requested enhancement of the downloaded file. SEE PROFILE Journal of Shellfish Research. Vol. 16. No. ]. 103-110. 1997. BREEDING CYCLE OF PEARL OYSTERS Pinctada mazatlanica AND Pteria sterna (BIVALVIA:PTERIIDAE) AT BAHIA DE LA PAZ, BAJA CALIFORNIA SUR, MEXICO PEDRO SAUCEDO AND MARIO MONTEFORTE Centra de Investigaciones Biologicas del Noroeste, S.C. P.O. Box. 12S La Paz. ABSTRACT The breeding cycles of pearl as part of a Pearl Culture Program in B.B.S.. Mexico oysters Pinctada mazatlanica and Pteria sterna were studied from June 1992 to May 1993 Bahfa de La Paz. Gonad samples of 20 oysters of each species were collected monthly (480 over and processed for histological examination. We studied the annual breeding cycle of both species, the sex ratio as and the size of the oysters. The results obtained by histological analysis were confirmed by similar changes in a gonadosomatic index. Gametogenesis was continuous throughout the year in both species. P. mazatlanica spawned once a year (September), when water temperature reached 29.5°C. It is a protandrous hermaphrodite in which sex reversal was observed in oysters the annual cycle) a function of time, 100-mm shell height. The female:male sex ratio was 0.12:1. Gonad maturity was found in oysters larger than 39 mm. P. spawned twice a year (February and May), when water temperature was 22.2 and 23.4°C. There was not enough evidence to conclude that P. sterna was a protandrous hermaphrodite. If that were the case, sex reversal would have occurred in oysters larger than larger than sterna 50-mm shell height. KEY WORDS: The female:male sex ratio was 0.38:1. Gonad maturity was seen in oysters larger than 40 Pearl oysters, breeding cycle, reproduction, repopulation, INTRODUCTION now in a critical situation because of overexploitation. The unconBahfa de La Paz for more than little and conservation Oysters used et al. 1994). 24°07'N, and its seasonal occurrence. No The objective of this is to study de- in Bahfa de La Paz. in this study were collected in 1991 at Isla Gavi- La Paz, between 24°46' and 10°38' and 110°18'W (Fig. 1). The selection of Caleta El Merito as the study area was made because of its climatic, geomorphologic. and oceanographic con- essential to ditions, 1990, Garcfa-Dominguez strategies. the southwest coast of Bahia de understand the reproductive biology of pearl oysters (Tranter al. P. mazatlanica, pointing out ota and reared by extensive culture at Caleta El Merito, located on The success of aquaculture of pearl oysters requires a proper knowledge of the biology and ecology of the species. To understand the population dynamics of the wild stock and, more re- 1958a. Sevilla 1969. Rose et only data avail- a precise microscopic MATERIALS AND METHODS 1983, Monteforte 1990. Monteforte 1991, Monteforte and is anatomy of under bottom-culture conditions repopulation, and recovery of the nacre resource has been emphasized on several occasions (Sevilla 1969, Dtaz-Garces 1972. Mar- it this study, the who made scribe the annual breeding cycle of the pearl oysters P. mazatlanica and P. sterna, obtained from extensive culture and kept urgent need to apply strategies for conservation, extensive culture, strategies, 1969), at production through extensive culture and induction to pearl formation, we are also searching for recovery The presence of pearl oysters in the Baja California Peninsula has played an important role in the social and economic development of the region, mainly in Bahfa de La Paz. Therefore, the development of pearl-culture ( development aiming la illegal extractions have continued, impeding the natural recovery of broodstock. cently, the of males to females In 1987, we started an applied research program on pearl oyster culture and pearl induction at the Centro de Investigaciones Biologicas del Noroeste, in Bahfa de La Paz. Parallel to technological 1991. Monteforte and Carino 1992, Carino and Monteforte 1995). At present, both species are under a legal ban decreed on the pearl oyster fishery (Diario Oficial de la Federacion 1939) and are con- Carino 1992, Saucedo and Monteforte 1994, Saucedo Before P. sterna. description of the gonad by 1940 (Sevilla 1969. Shirai and Sano 1979. Carino 1987. Carino and Caceres-Martinez 1990. Monteforte 1990. Monteforte tinez is ratio with increasing age (Gervis and Sims 1992). known about the reproductive biology of P. each phase of the breeding cycle and study has been done on P. sterna. tirely Federacion 1994). However, However, 1:1 able were those of Sevilla the natural stocks along the coast almost en- sidered "species under special protection" (Diario Oficial de and external processes). The tends toward mazatlanica and trolled pearl fishery carried out in 400 years depleted Bahfa de La Paz internal Mexico, natural populations of the native species Pinctada mazatlanica (Hanley, 1856) and Pteria sterna (Gould. 1851) are In mm. more et al. 1 which were adequate for the development of the study. detailed description of the area is provided A Alvarez- in Borrego and Schwartzlose (1979), Osuna-Valdez (1986). Murillo 1987), and Monteforte and Carino (1992). 1996). ( There have been a number of studies of the reproductive biolthat most aspects In April ogy of the genus Pinctada. These studies reveal of the breeding cycle of pearl oysters are common to all species. to be functional protandrous hermaphrodites (maturing cm 40-cm width, and 20-cm height) placed on a submerged 10-m depth. Sixteen cages were placed on the bottom of the study area (eight per species), each one containing 30 oysters. The initial size range varied from 39.5 to 136.5-mm shell height They seem as males and changing Correspondence to: to females at a certain size, 1992. 480 oysters (240 of each species) were trans- ferred to bottom-culture conditions, using plastic pearl cages (70length, shelf regulated by for P. Pedro Saucedo. Centra de Investigaciones Biologicas mm at mazatlanica (mean, 80.55; SD, 20.25) and from 41 . 1 to 89.2 SD. 12.30). Twenty oysters of each species were collected monthly using del Noroeste. S.C. Division de Biologfa Marina. P.O. Box. 128. La Paz. Baja California Sur, Mexico. 103 for P. sterna (mean. 66.12: Saucedo and Monteforte 104 GI = This GW/ WWS x 100 obtained by dividing the gonad weight of the animal (GW) wet weight without shell (WWS). multiplied by 100. Finally, the relationship between the GI and the monthly changes in (he by is its water temperature during the annual cycle was also studied. RESULTS Gonad Developmental Stages Gametogenesis was found to be a continuous process through- out the annual cycle in both species. However, many of the stages of the breeding cycle overlapped in time within the same gonad, so their classification into any gametogenic stage was sometimes dif- determine. The most important microscopic characteristics of the gonad anatomy are described as follows: ficult to Indeterminate or Inactive There is no evidence of gonad development. Instead, the gonad consists mainly of connective tissue. Follicles are completely empty and may contain some phagocytes. Gonads are not able to be classified as to sex (Fig. 2A). Developing or Near-Ripe Figure 1. Location of the study area (Caleta El Merito) inside Bahia de La Paz, indicated bv closed diamond. The production of gametes begins. At first, follicles are small and poorly developed. Oogonia in the ovary and spermatogonia in the testis are mainly connected to the follicular wall (Figs. 2B and As gametogenesis proceeds, different stages of gametes can be observed. In the testis, primary and secondary spermatocytes 3A). proliferate rapidly. In the ovary, connected SCUBA gear, and they were preserved in 10<7<- formalin for 48 h. Before dissection, the following shell measurements were taken with plastic calipers (±0.01 mm) according to Hynd's expressions ( 1955): height or dorsoventral measurement, length or anteropos- measurement, thickness, wet weight of the oyster with shell, wet weight without shell, and wet weight of the visceral mass in which the gonadal tissue is intermingled. This latter sample, alterior ways excised between the labial palps, near the foot, and the intestine tube, was processed for histological examination. Samples were embedded in paraffin, sectioned at 7 or 8 p.m. and stained by the hemotoxylin-eosin technique. pound microscope at They were analyzed with a com- low magnifications (lOx and 40x) and were some spermato- zoa, or free oocytes with yolk and nucleolus, are common little Maturity or Ripe The gonad has grown and enlarged mass, and especially to the gonads, we used understand the seasonal changes occurring in five broad gametogenic stages, using the schemes developed by Sevilla (1969) for P. mazatlanica, and Rose et al. (1990) for P. maxima. The stages ripe. (4) spawning, and as a compact and uniform and hard to follicles are distended layer in the distal regions of the gonad. The follicular lumen is mainly with polygonal-shaped free oocytes with yolk and nucleolus (in the ovary) or with spermatozoa clearly defined by Some isolated pockets of developing oogonia or spermatids can be observed (Figs. 2D and their eosinophilic tails (in the testis). 3C). Spawning (5) spent. We also calculated the total female:male sex ratio of both species, the sex ratio as a function of time, and the sex ratio related to It is at right was used This phase is easy to detect because of the expulsion of gametes. Follicles are broken, distended, and partially empty. The lumen is filled with residual free oocytes or thin spermatozoa, most adequate considered the largest dimension of the showing signs of regression angles to the hinge Spent the size of the oysters. Shell height oyster measured which the individual are: (1) indeterminate or inactive, (2) devel- oping or near-ripe, (3) maturity or indicator of growth. in distinguish. Connective tissue has been reduced to a small and thin photographed through the microscope. the breeding cycle of both species, in the During this stage, the amount of connective tissue rapidly decreases and almost disappears. follicles. filled To analyze and some free oocytes 2C and 3A). At or no yolk expand into the lumen (Figs. the final stages of gametogenesis. spermatids and with as the line, excluding the growth processes (Hynd 1955). At the same time as histological analysis was done, a gonadosomatic index (GI) was calculated with the oyster's measurements originally taken, using the equation proposed by Sastry (1970): Follicles (Figs. 2E and 3D). have become extremely thin, and the lumen is prac- empty, with some isolated pockets of residual oocytes or spermatozoa. This phase is characterized by the rapid proliferation tically Breeding Cycle of Pearl Oysters 105 0>' ' Figure 2. Sexual phases of male gametogenesis in P. mazatlanica and P. sterna. (A) Indeterminate phase in /'. sterna, showing empty follicles with some phagocytes (ph); (B) early gametogenesis in P. sterna, in which small follicles (fo( contain spermatogonia (sg) connected to the follicular wall, primary and secondary spermatocytes (sc) expanding toward the lumen, and some spermatozoa (sp) filling the center; (C) adyanced in P. mazatlanica with distended follicles containing large amounts of spermatozoa; (D) maturity stage in P. mazatlanica, characterized by the presence of follicles packed ytith spermatozoa almost exclusively; (E) spawning in P. mazatlanica with broken and partially empty follicles containing residual spermatozoa Irs), and the presence of different kinds of phagocytes: (K) spent stage in P. sterna, in which emptj and collapsed follicles contain high phagocytic activity; connective tissue is deyeloping again. Scale bar. 25 pm. gametogenesis Saucedo and Monteforte 106 Sexual phases of female gametogenesis in P. mazatianica and Early gametogenesis in P. mazatianica showing poorly developed follicles (fo) with small oogonia (og) connected to the follicFigure 3. P. sterna. (A) ular wall, lacking yolk and nucleolus, and auxiliary cells (ac); (B) advanced gametogenesis mazatianica, in which in P. immature pe- present in the follicle, together with polygonal-shaped free oocytes (ocl with yolk and nucleolus; (C) maturity in P. sterna, containing mainly free-shaped oocytes filling the duncle-shaped oocytes (po) are lumen: ID) spawning in /'. still sterna, in which follicles are thin and col- lapsed, with residual oocytes (rol; (E) spent stage in P. mazatianica, with residual oocytes showing signs of regression. Scale har, 25 uni. of different kinds of phagocytes surrounding the gametes. The connective tissue has started to develop again (Figs. 2F and 3E). oysters were spent in October and continued in November and November. Gonad development May. Mature oysters were lasted until seen from February to May. P. mazatianica Sex Ratio Breeding Cycle The breeding cycle of P. mazatianica is shown in Figure 4. In June and July, oysters at different developmental stages are common; a large number of them have started gonad development, others have reached maturity, and another group spent. Spawning took place in was found to be September and October, and most This was completely skewed to the male sex. From the total sample analyzed, 77% were male, 9% female, and the last 13% were indeterminate. The female:male sex ratio was 0.12:1. The sex ratio related to oyster size revealed that P. matured as male and tended to mazatianica be a protandrous hermaphrodite. Breeding Cycle of Pearl Oysters £ 107 Saucedo and Monteforte 108 706050 40302010- JUN JUL AUG SEP OCT NOV DEC JAN FEB MAR APR HAY TIME (months) J INDETERMINATE Hi Figure SPAWNING 8. £2 DEVELOPING '//, SPENT J MATURITY JUL AUG OCT SEP NOV DEC JAN FEB MAR APR MAY TIME (months) Sexual gametogenic stages in P. sterna during an annual Figure 10. Temporal sex ratio in P. sterna. cycle. Figure 9 shows the percentage of females and males. The sizerange analysis suggests that P. sterna can be a protandrous her- and May, coincided with the two spawings observed in the year. The GI and the water temperature had an inverse relationship. maphrodite. Males were present from 40 to 85-mm shell height. with a higher incidence between 40 and 55 mm. Females appeared after 50-55 but were not represented in all of the size ranges. DISCUSSION mm Their maximum number was observed between 60 and 65 mm and mm. Indeterminate oysters were present in all of the size 85 and 90 ranges (Fig. 9). Figure 10 shows the sex ratio as a function of time. Once again, the male sex was present over the entire annual cycle, but with a higher incidence in January, February, and April during the spawn- As suggested by Giese and Pearse (1974). pearl oysters from temperate regions generally exhibit discrete and regular breeding seasons. Evidence found in this study indicated that P. mazatlanica and P. sterna esis was found followed a clear annual breeding cycle. Gametogento be a continuous process throughout the annual rest cycle in both species. Changes observed in the reproductive activity of the oysters during the annual cycle were regulated mostly by of the annual cycle. This behavior, unlike that of P. mazatlanica, could indicate that this species is a multispawner. seasonal changes in the water temperature. Earlier work done on pearl oyster reproduction from different parts of the world con- ings. Females appeared from August on and were present the firms Orton's rule: GI "if temperature conditions are constant or nearly so and the biological conditions do not vary much, animals The index seems to describe adequately the reproductive activity of the oysters. The relationship between the index and the ). reproductive activity of the oysters was relatively close (Fig. 1 The highest peaks in the values of the index, recorded in and April, indicated the gonads sexually ripe. to The lowest values of be in active 1 December development or the index, detected in March continuously" (Orton 1929 in Chellam 1987). Tranter (1958b-d) observed a definite annual reproductive will breed cycle for Pinctada albina and Pinctada margaritifera from the Strait, Queensland. Sevilla (1969) also found a breeding Torres cycle with continuous gametogenesis in P. mazatlanica from Bahia de La Paz. Mexico. Rose et al. 1990) noted the same pattern ( maxima from Eighty-Mile Beach, and Garcfa-Domi'nguez et al. (1996) made of gametogeneis for Pinctada Western Australia, MALE JUN FEMALE JUL AUG SEP OCT NOV DEC JAN TIME (months) FEB MAR APR MAY NDETERM 40-45 60-65 5D-55 45-50 55-60 75-60 TEMPERATURE GONADOSOMATIC INDEX 80-85 70-75 65-70 85-90 SHELL HEIGHT (mm) Figure Figure 9. Size-related sex ratio in P. sterna. 11. P. sterna. Relationship between the (il and the water temperature for Breeding Cycle of Pearl Oysters similar observations for wild P. mazatlanica from Isla Espfritu Santo. Baja California Sur. Mexico. However, some differences in the overall pattern of gametogenesis of pearl oysters can be detected. P. albina breeds annually and spawns once between April and May cember and from February to April ritifera also has a bimodal spawning gust and from (Tranter 1958c), whereas P. annually, but spawns twice, from October to De- maxima breeds September (Rose 19901. P. et al. pattern, from March February (Tranter 1958d). to A 109 ranging from 72 to 176-mm shell height. A sex ratio of 1:1 was observed for P. maxima from Eighty-Mile Beach. Western Aus- 200-mm tralia, at shell height (Rose et al. 1990). For P. sterna, there was not enough evidence to conclude that the species were protandrous hermaphrodites, although the female: male sex ratio was Females were present 0.38:1. >50-mm margato Ausmaller capacity to change sex at been reached. Previous descriptions of this two spawning peaks, during June to February, at Tuticorin Harbour (Chel- species. Pinctada fucata, has all Apparently, made by members of phenomenon have been Wada (1953a), Tranter Wada 1953) and (1958a), and Rose Pearse 1974). for P. margaritifera; During our study, P. mazatlanica bred annually and spawned once, from September to October, when the water temperature rose to 29-30°C. Histological evidence indicates a second short spawn- change may (Cahn 1949. Tranter 1958a-d. Chellam 1987, Rose Sevilla 1969) for P. mazatlanica; ( (1990) for P. maxima; et al. Ojima and Maeki (1955) in The and Tranter (1959) for the Ostreidae, Teredinidae, water temperature. Unfortunately, the monthly sampling used for collecting the gonads did not allow us to detect this. P. sterna by Tranter (1958b) for spawned twice during the annual cycle. The was from February to March, when the water peak temperature decreased to 24°C. The lesser peak was from April to maximum 22.8°C. Once again, the histological evidence suggests the possibility of a third spawning, during June or July. We believe that P. sterna is potentially capable of spawning throughout the year, because mature gonads the water temperature of both sexes were present almost dropped all year. to Rose et al. ( 1990) found mature oysters outside the main breeding period, suggesting that P. maxima is also capable of spawning all year. The histological gonad analysis revealed that spawning in P. mazatlanica and P. sterna was not complete during the breeding season, and a large number of residual gametes were present after the spawning at the spent stage. We found phagocytic activity in oysters of both species that had recently spawned, indicating the presence of gonad regression. Tranter (1958c) and Rose (1990) detected incomplete spawning and gonad regression et al. in P. albina and P. maxima. However, regression in P. sterna was inafter the first complete massive spawning in We February. the possibility of a second short breeding cycle in suggest which animals avoid the spent stage and pass directly to gametogenesis after the first spawning. Similar observations were made by Sevilla 1969) ( for P. mazatlanica. seem to be functional protandrous hermaphrowith sexes separated by time. However, bisexual phases may Pearl oysters dites, same gonad, although they appear to be transitional and nonfunctional, as suggested by Rose et al. (1990) for P. occur in the maxima. Two cases of hermaphroditism both after 60-mm were detected shell height. Similarly, in P. sterna. Garcfa-Domfnguez et al. study, we managed young The total sex ratio female:male sex ratio of 0.12:1 and the mean were observed under 100 mm confirmed Isla Espfritu males, the study this. mm. Garcfa-Domfnguez found a different female:male sex ratio of 1.33:1 from in P. No et al. females (1996) mazatlanica Santo. However, although females outnumbered was 39 to 49-mm "weak be explained by a shell height for P. mazatlanica. was reached This size range, corresponding to 8 months olds, was reached using organisms reared by extensive culture. P. sterna maturity was detected at 40to 45- mm shell height, ever, because P. sterna corresponding to is 1 1 months a relatively small species, male maturity can be attained at the pearl cages could have somehow we olds. How- believe that a lower size, and the density inside inhibited gonad maturity. 1978) found for P. fucata, a similar species in size, male within 8 months and spawning at 9 months in Tuticorin maturity Harbour. Tranter (1958a) also noticed P. albina. another small Chellam ( and spawn at 4 months. Male maturity occurs 110-120 mm during the first year (Rose et al. species, to be mature for P. maxima at 1990). Full maturity is not attained by P. margaritifera until the second year (Crossland 1957). The GI was method for estimating the of reproductive activity pearl oysters. Resting on the assumption that the ratio of body parts varies little with change in size of the a useful quantitative animal (Giese and Pearse 1974). we were able to measure the relative reproductive condition of the oysters of different sizes to compare changes in their gonads at different times. In and species possessing little nutritive tissue in the gonads, like pearl oysters, an increase in GI was interpreted as a buildup of gametogenesis. with a decrease interpreted as spawning (Giese 1959). Because weight and volume values increase by approximately the cube of linear dimensions (Galtsoff 1931 ), care should be taken to equate dimensions when volumetric and linear measurements are used, as oc- curred in this study. However, a limitation of the GI is that, unless accompanied by it could not be considered a reliable tool for studying the breeding cycle of pearl oysters and for understanding the seasonal changes occurring in their gonads. For pearl-culture programs, histology, coupled with gonad index measurements, is recom- wild was completely skewed to the male sex in both species, and therefore, they behaved as protondrous hermaphrodites. Particularly in sex-reversal size detected at 100 may oysters instead of adults, especially in P. mazatlanica. a larger species. P. mazatlanica. the it mechanism." microscopic examination of the gonads, it indicates little as to what is occurring within the gonads. Therefore, if used as a single in lanica. this at 1990). et al. other bivalves like P mazat- (1990) found two hermaphrodite specimens In in Histological data demonstrated that male maturity also bred annually, but However, and Pectinidae. and as hypothesized P. albina. hereditary sex-determining P. fucata. be brought about by stress of sex reversal has been observed ing could have occurred in June or July, triggered again by changes in ( for Pinctada martensii; Tranter (1958d) sex can be reversible and ability mm. genus Pinctada exhibit this a certain size, after male maturity has the September and December to lam 1987). The tendency for a bimodal spawning pattern has been described for several marine invertebrates (Giese 1959, Giese and May. when shell height, but males kept appearing with high frequency up to 85 carried out with larger individuals (adults). method, mended for understanding the overall pattern of reproduction in pearl oysters. Other aspects of the reproductive biology of pearl oysters P. P. sterna are yet to be studied. To improve the techniques and strategies for spat collection, cultivation, growth, mazatlanica and and especially, the production of high-quality cultured pearls, an- Saucedo and Monteforte 110 nual and biannual on the breeding cycle of pearl oysters are trials recommended. dedicate this work to the memory of (Grupo Ostras Perleras) of Don Gaston Vives, pioneer of pearl culture in the world. The study was conducted as part of an institutional program of the Centro de Investigaciones (CIBNOR), Mexico. Biologicas del Noroeste invaluable help of the Pearl Oyster Research ciate the ACKNOWLEDGMENTS We (CONACYT-Mexico) since 1990, and the Sistema de InvestigaMar de Cortes (SIMAC-Mexico) since 1994. We appre- dores del It has also been funded by the International Foundation for Science (IFS of Sweden) since 1990, the Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnologfa CIBNOR. for all of the Group SCUBA diving support during the in situ study. Special thanks to Victor Perez, Horacio Bervera, Humberto Wright, and Sandra Morales. We are M.C. Federico Garcia Domtnguez. CICIMAR, also indebted to who provided important assistance during the histological analysis. Finally, we thank Dr. Ellis Glazier, CIBNOR, for the editorial help on the English language manuscript. LITERATURE CITED Alvarez-Borrego, S. & R. A. Schwartzlose. 1979. Masas de agua del Golfo de California. Ciencias Marinas 6:43-63. Cahn. A. R. 1949. Pearl Culture States Department of the DC. ton. Interior. Fish californie. 1987. Le mythe perlier dans l'histoire coloniale de AMAC M. M. Sud- 1990. La perlicultura en la Peninsula siglo. Serie Cientifica (Special Num- l):l-6. & M. Bay of La Mexico (1533-1914). 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