2010
DOI: 10.1016/j.marenvres.2009.07.002
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Rising water temperatures, reproduction and recruitment of an invasive oyster, Crassostrea gigas, on the French Atlantic coast

Abstract: The recent appearance and invasion of feral oysters (Crassostrea gigas) along the northern European Atlantic coast, underscores the necessity to investigate the relationship between environmental variables, reproductive physiology, larval development and recruitment. We studied these relationships at both high (HT) and intermediate (IT) - turbidity sites, through historical data on water temperatures, multi-parameter environmental probes, histological analyses, and field collections of planktonic larvae and se… Show more

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Cited by 62 publications
(42 citation statements)
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“…In Europe, it was massively imported in the 1970s and rapidly became the main cultivated species, following the decline of previously farmed oysters which had been struck by large-scale epizootic outbreaks (Grizel and Héral, 1991;Humphreys et al, 2014). During recent decades, C. gigas benefited from coastal eutrophication and rising sea temperature (Thomas et al, 2016), resulting in a poleward expansion of its distribution (Dutertre et al, 2010) and the formation of dense reefs along many coastal areas (Diederich, 2006;Brandt et al, 2008;Le Bris et al, 2016). In some ecosystems, wild C. gigas is now considered as a trophic competitor of its cultivated conspecifics (Cognie et al, 2006).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Europe, it was massively imported in the 1970s and rapidly became the main cultivated species, following the decline of previously farmed oysters which had been struck by large-scale epizootic outbreaks (Grizel and Héral, 1991;Humphreys et al, 2014). During recent decades, C. gigas benefited from coastal eutrophication and rising sea temperature (Thomas et al, 2016), resulting in a poleward expansion of its distribution (Dutertre et al, 2010) and the formation of dense reefs along many coastal areas (Diederich, 2006;Brandt et al, 2008;Le Bris et al, 2016). In some ecosystems, wild C. gigas is now considered as a trophic competitor of its cultivated conspecifics (Cognie et al, 2006).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…gigas has been widely studied all over the world, and its life history (reproduction, larval cycle and re cruitment phase) has been relatively well described in both controlled environments (Fabioux et al 2005, Enriquez-Diaz et al 2009, Rico-Villa et al 2010) and coastal tidal ecosystems (Dutertre et al 2010, Thomas et al 2016, Bernard et al 2016. Fewer studies have been conducted in nanotidal environments such as Mediterranean lagoons (Tagliapietra & Ghirardini 2006).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A pronounced positive effect of water warming on the reproduction of another invasive species, Crassostrea gigas (feral oysters), has previously been documented , Dutertre et al 2010 for Bourgneuf Bay. It thus seems logical to investigate the same possibility for Crepi dula fornicata.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…Normal C. gigas spawning in Bourgneuf Bay occurs from May to July (Dutertre et al 2009(Dutertre et al , 2010, so the appearance of C. fornicata larvae as early as February would permit the benthic recruitment of this species well in advance of C. gigas (which spawned in The combined effect of both an extended brooding season and increased propagule numbers may be expected to accentuate the proliferation of Crepidula fornicata in Bourgneuf Bay, and by the same token, provide a competitive advantage to this species with respect to the co-occurring Crassostrea gigas.…”
Section: Reproductive Cyclesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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