Midvalley Fairy Shrimp - Ecology and Description

Ecology and Description

Fairy shrimp are in the order Anostraca ("an" meaning without, "ostraca" meaning hard plate or shell). They do not have a carapace, a hard shell covering their heads and backs. The midvalley fairy shrimp uses its phyllopods to filter food out of the water, including phytoplankton, detrital bacterial colonies, rotifers, protozoa and small larvae of various species, which it then passes up to its mouth via a food groove on its belly. In addition to providing for movement, oxygen and food, the phyllopods also contain cells responsible for salt exchange.

The midvalley fairy shrimp was only recently formally described as a species in 2000 by Belk and Fugate. Adult males of the species most closely resemble male Conservancy fairy shrimp, in that their antennae are relatively smooth and consist of two jointed segments of approximately equal length, the second of which bends inward about 90° at the tip. Viewed from the belly side of the animal, the tip has two humps, the larger of which is towards the front of the animal in the midvalley fairy shrimp and towards the rear in the Conservancy fairy shrimp. The antennal configuration has more significance than might at first appear. Males use these appendages to clasp females during mating. The females thrash about when clasped, and inappropriately shaped male antennae are less likely to successfully hold on. Females are easily distinguished from female Conservancy fairy shrimp because of their pear-shaped rather than spindle-shaped brood pouches, which do not extend as far down the body. Female midvalley fairy shrimp more closely resemble female vernal pool fairy shrimp, which also have pear-shaped brood pouches. However, female vernal pool fairy shrimp also possess a pair of conspicuous bumps on the sides of their third thoracic segments, which midvalley shrimp lack.

As might be expected from a species found in relatively small, potentially quick drying pools, midvalley fairy shrimp can mature very quickly in warm pools, which are typically small. However, they can mature more slowly in cooler (typically larger) pools. They can mature within about 8 days of hatching, although 26 seems to be the average. Multiple hatchings have been observed in a single rainy season.

The species has been found in shallow vernal pools, vernal swales and various artificial ephemeral wetland habitats in Sacramento County, Solano County, Contra Costa County, San Joaquin County, Madera County, Merced County and Fresno County. Vernal pools are shallow depressions with impermeable soils that collect water during the wet season, dry completely during the dry season, and support a specific community of plants adapted to such conditions. Vernal swales are similar, but tend to convey surface runoff during wet seasons in somewhat defined vegetated channels that often connect vernal pools. Midvalley fairy shrimp have also been found in various roadside puddles, scrapes, and ditches, and in several railroad toe-drain pools. The species appears to do best in shallow, cool water pools that are low to moderate in dissolved salts. However, it can tolerate warm water. In one instance live adults were found swimming in 32 °C (90 °F) water. Members of the species have also been found in some relatively alkaline pools. A 1998 comparison of the characteristics of pools used by the eight branchiopod species endemic to Northern California found that midvalley fairy shrimp used the shallowest pools. The midvalley shrimp were found in pools averaging 10.1 centimetres (4.0 in) deep.

Midvalley fairy shrimp populations survive the seasonal drying of their ponds by laying eggs encased in nearly impervious shells. Embryos within these eggs enter a dormant state called diapause. Dormant eggs are referred to as cysts. Because not all cysts hatch with each refilling of a pool they can form a sort of "seed bank" in the soil that produces new populations of adult shrimp where none had been seen in years. In related species, cysts many decades old have been successfully hatched. Since the cysts can pass unharmed through the digestive systems of other animals, and since they are very small (0.27 millimetres or 0.011 inches), they can be transported to new locations by birds or mammals and thereby found new colonies.

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