Settlement & Metamorphosis of Marine Invertebrate Larvae
A special issue of Journal of Marine Science and Engineering (ISSN 2077-1312).
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 November 2015) | Viewed by 8064
Special Issue Editor
Interests: environmental toxicology; marine fouling; environmentally benign antifoulants; plastic pollution
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Marine invertebrates have diverse life histories, including a wide range of larval development trajectories and strategies. Larval stages usually disperse and colonize. However, specific settlement and metamorphosis patterns are crucial to successful recruitment and to ensure favourable conditions for adult existence. From an ecologist perspective, these critical developmental steps represent complex physiological processes that respond to environmental cues and in turn modify the larva's surroundings. For example, the use of chemicals to stimulate metamorphosis may enhance larval production in hatcheries, while early settlement by key encrusting species may result in significant ship hull biofouling. From an academic perspective, recent studies on population connectivity have highlighted the need to understand larval development under various environmental conditions to answer biogeographic, evolution and conservation ecology questions. While traditional methods, such as microscopy, histology, toxicology and molecular biology have facilitated understanding of key larval roles and sensitivities, the advent of biotechnological approaches, such as genomics, proteomics, and metabolomics, are rapidly expanding our knowledge of complex and essential larval processes.
This special issue is intended to highlight the current state of the art and future directions in larval development with a special emphasis on research targeting settlement and metamorphosis. We would like to specially invite contributions in both academic and applied areas, such as aquaculture biotechnology, biofouling, larval functioning (e.g., physiology, toxicology, immunology, genetics), population connectivity, evolution and conservation.
Prof. Dr. Daniel RittschofGuest Editors
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Keywords
- marine larval ecology
- larval metamorphosis
- dispersal and settlement
- bioadhesion
- marine biofouling/antifouling
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