Sl. Waddy et De. Aiken, ENVIRONMENTAL INTERVENTION IN THE REPRODUCTIVE PROCESS OF THE AMERICAN LOBSTER, HOMARUS-AMERICANUS, INVERTEBRATE REPRODUCTION & DEVELOPMENT, 22(1-3), 1992, pp. 245-252
The efficient culture of an animal requires a reliable year-round supp
ly of seed. However, in most species knowledge is insufficient for the
degree of broodstock control required to sehedule seed production thr
oughout the year. Although it has been relatively easy to identify the
regulatory parameters in some species, in many others it has been dif
ficult. In the American lobster (Homarus americanus), controlling mech
anisms are complex: responses to temperature and photoperiod vary with
environmental history and season, and shifting the onset of a tempera
ture increase by only a few days can produce entirely different respon
ses. After two decades of experimental work, we have finally developed
a broodstock system that produces synchronous and predictable spawnin
g as required. Two strategies are used to produce year-round seed from
a stock that normally spawns in July: (1) spawning is achieved throug
hout the winter and spring (late January-June) by inducing spawning wi
th unseasonably high temperature (13-degrees-C) and short photophases
(LD 8:16); and (2) spawning is achieved through the late summer and au
tumn (August-December) by delaying spawning with low temperatures (1-2
-degrees-C).