The present study provides the first clear evidence of larval developmental
plasticity in forcipulate seastars and a relationship between egg size and
developmental plasticity. Adult Pisaster ochraceus were collected from Poi
nt Caution (a wave-protected site) and Mar Vista (a wave-exposed site) on t
he San Juan Islands. Seastars from the wave-exposed site were larger and ha
d larger pyloric caeca while those from the wave-protected site were smalle
r with smaller pyloric caeca. Bigger females produced smaller eggs with a l
ow biochemical content/egg and smaller females produced bigger eggs with a
high biochemical content/egg. Egg quality and larval food had a significant
effect on larval growth, development and survival. Bipinnariae from large
eggs were initially bigger with faster developmental rates than those from
small eggs. When starved, the numbers of bipinnariae surviving later on in
development were higher for those from large eggs than for those from small
eggs. When fed, the numbers of larvae surviving was higher for those from
small eggs. This suggests that for this species large and small eggs might
have equivalent fitness depending on the environmental conditions in which
the offspring develop. All bipinnariae responded to food scarcity by changi
ng their form, with those from smaller eggs responding to food scarcity lat
er than those from larger eggs. Starved early bipinnaria stages were longer
and wider and fed bipinnariae were narrower and shorter. Wider bipinnariae
with larger mouths and stomachs were able to progress to more advanced sta
ges while those with smaller internal structures could not. Thus for this s
pecies the mere increase in bipinnaria length and width might be insufficie
nt to ensure continued larval development under food-limiting conditions; c
hanges in internal morphology such as increase in the size of the digestive
tract might be necessary. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserv
ed.