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The biology of the common prawn, Leander serratus Pennant

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 May 2009

G. R. Forster
Affiliation:
From the Plymouth Laboratory

Extract

This work was undertaken at the suggestion of Mr F. S. Russell that little was known about the natural history of even so familiar a species as Leander serratus, the common prawn of the English Channel, which may at times form a valuable natural resource to the inshore fishermen. Attention was therefore chiefly concentrated on its growth rate and breeding biology. In spite of the long breeding season the statistical method of studying growth was adopted when preliminary results appeared successful. By this method additional data could be obtained on distribution and migration. In the closely related genus Crangon, growth has been shown to be retarded under laboratory conditions (Nouvel & van Rysselberge, 1937), so that an experimental study could not be relied on to give a picture of the normal life history. Höglund's recent monograph (1943) has treated Leander squilla in great detail. However, this species differs considerably in size and distribution from L. serratus, and it was felt that a similar study in the Plymouth area would not be mere repetition; in fact the biology of L. squilla itself differs somewhat in the two districts.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 1951

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