A compilation of longevity data in decapod crustaceans

Abstract Longevity information was collected from 219 literature sources for 244 decapod crustaceans, representing 1.7% of species, 4.8% of genera and 30% of families. Reliable methods of age determination (laboratory rearing, mark-recapture method, growth models, lipofuscin method) revealed longevi...

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Main Author: Günter Vogt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sociedade Brasileira de Carcinologia
Series:Nauplius
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0104-64972019000100300&lng=en&tlng=en
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spelling doaj-172533be25fb445190b049db1b4933c92020-11-24T23:59:51ZengSociedade Brasileira de CarcinologiaNauplius2358-29362710.1590/2358-2936e2019011S0104-64972019000100300A compilation of longevity data in decapod crustaceansGünter VogtAbstract Longevity information was collected from 219 literature sources for 244 decapod crustaceans, representing 1.7% of species, 4.8% of genera and 30% of families. Reliable methods of age determination (laboratory rearing, mark-recapture method, growth models, lipofuscin method) revealed longevities from 0.1 to 72 years, corresponding to a 700-fold difference between the shortest and longest lived species. The mean longevity of the species included in this article is 7.1 years (SD=10.18; CV=142.9%); 61.1% of the species live less than 5 years, 29.5% live between 5 and 20 years, and 9.4% live longer than 20 years. The basal Dendrobranchiata have a mean longevity of only 2.1 years whereas the Achelata have a mean longevity of 27.2 years. The oldest decapod aged with a direct method is a hermit crab that was reared in captivity for more than 42 years. The particularly long-lived species belong to different families of the infraorders Achelata, Astacidea, Anomura and Brachyura. Average longevity is highest in semiterrestrial and terrestrial habitats (13.0 years), followed by freshwater (7.2 years) and marine and brackish waters (6.0 years). The deep sea, polar waters, freshwater caves and terrestrial environments apparently promote the evolution of high life spans.http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0104-64972019000100300&lng=en&tlng=enDecapodalife spanenvironmenttaxonomyevolution
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Günter Vogt
spellingShingle Günter Vogt
A compilation of longevity data in decapod crustaceans
Nauplius
Decapoda
life span
environment
taxonomy
evolution
author_facet Günter Vogt
author_sort Günter Vogt
title A compilation of longevity data in decapod crustaceans
title_short A compilation of longevity data in decapod crustaceans
title_full A compilation of longevity data in decapod crustaceans
title_fullStr A compilation of longevity data in decapod crustaceans
title_full_unstemmed A compilation of longevity data in decapod crustaceans
title_sort compilation of longevity data in decapod crustaceans
publisher Sociedade Brasileira de Carcinologia
series Nauplius
issn 2358-2936
description Abstract Longevity information was collected from 219 literature sources for 244 decapod crustaceans, representing 1.7% of species, 4.8% of genera and 30% of families. Reliable methods of age determination (laboratory rearing, mark-recapture method, growth models, lipofuscin method) revealed longevities from 0.1 to 72 years, corresponding to a 700-fold difference between the shortest and longest lived species. The mean longevity of the species included in this article is 7.1 years (SD=10.18; CV=142.9%); 61.1% of the species live less than 5 years, 29.5% live between 5 and 20 years, and 9.4% live longer than 20 years. The basal Dendrobranchiata have a mean longevity of only 2.1 years whereas the Achelata have a mean longevity of 27.2 years. The oldest decapod aged with a direct method is a hermit crab that was reared in captivity for more than 42 years. The particularly long-lived species belong to different families of the infraorders Achelata, Astacidea, Anomura and Brachyura. Average longevity is highest in semiterrestrial and terrestrial habitats (13.0 years), followed by freshwater (7.2 years) and marine and brackish waters (6.0 years). The deep sea, polar waters, freshwater caves and terrestrial environments apparently promote the evolution of high life spans.
topic Decapoda
life span
environment
taxonomy
evolution
url http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0104-64972019000100300&lng=en&tlng=en
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