 Zooplankton of the Great Lakes
Zooplankton of the Great Lakes 
|    Chirocephalopsis bundyi  Classification Kingdom - Animalia Taxonomic History The first identification of Chirocephalopsis bundyi
  (fairy shrimp) was in 1876 by S.A. Forbes.  In the past, this species
  has been listed under the genera Eubranchipus
  and Pristicephalus (Dexter 1953). 
   Anatomy Fairy shrimp are distinct members of the class
  Branchiopoda with stalked compound eyes, 11 pairs of swimming appendages, and
  a long, cylindrical body without a carapace (Ward and Whipple 1918). 
  These swimming appendages are used for locomotion, respiration, and food
  consumption.  Their total length usually ranges from 10 to 18 mm long (Pennak 1953).  The coloration in fairy shrimp is variable, but is mostly a whitish color.  The first
  antennae of this species are relatively small, uniramous, and unsegmented (Pennak 1953).  The body of a fairy shrimp is loosely
  distinguished as the head and the trunk segments.  The trunk segments includes the swimming legs, the genital segments, and the
  telson with two cercopods (Figure 3). Female fairy shrimp have an elongated,
  cylindrical second antennae, while the males have large second antennae
  specialized for holding the females during copulation 
  (Pennak 1953).  This male species of
  fairy shrimp also has an antennal appendage, which
  is ribbonlike and coiled close to the second antennae (Figure 1).  The
  genital segment includes the two penes on the male
  and the egg sac on the female (Figures 1 and 2)(Pennak 1953).  In addition
  the females have a much more compact head and thinner body frame than the
  male fairy shrimp. Distribution C. bundyi has been observed in various different localities, but is common in the northern states and
  Canada.  Some of these locations include Alaska, the Yukon Territory,
  Alberta, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec, Massachusetts, New York, Michigan,
  Wisconsin, Ohio, Indiana, and Wyoming (Pennak
  1953).  The locations of these fairy shrimp are variable from year to
  year in distribution and abundance due to favorable conditions (Ward and
  Whipple 1918).  In most locations, males are less abundant than females.
  (Knight et al. 1975).  These populations of fairy shrimp are more
  abundant in the spring and then disappear in the summer with unfavorable
  temperature conditions.  C. bundyi is
  rarely found in bodies of water that are warmer than 15 degrees Celsius. Habitat Fairy shrimp are
  mostly found in temporary ponds or vernal pools.  These bodies of water
  are usually fishless because they are too temporary, small, and alkaline for
  fish populations to survive (Pennak 1953). 
  Fairy shrimp are absent from lakes and are seldom
  found in bodies of water that exceed one acre.  These organisms would
  not be able to survive with fish as predators, but can usually survive with
  amphibians and carnivorous insects, which are other predators of the fairy
  shrimp.  Also, C. bundyi are restricted
  to clear ponds or pools in opposition to other fairy shrimp, which inhabit
  more muddy waters (Pennak 1953). Feeding Ecology The fairy shrimp primarily feed on algae,
  bacteria, Protozoa, rotifers, and bits of detritus (Pennak
  1953).  This food is compacted in the ventral groove on a mucilaginous
  string located between the bases of the appendages.  The available food
  is constantly traveling forward to their mouth using the movement of their
  appendages (Ward and Whipple 1918).  Mastication of their food occurs
  right outside the digestive tract in an opening formed by the overhanging
  labrum (Pennak 1953).  It is believed that
  this species feeds continuously, but that not all of
  the food is ingested (Pennak 1953).  The
  primary food for C. bundyi are microscopic organisms and detritus, which they feed on
  at the bottom sediment with their ventral side pointed downward (Pennak 1953).  Fairy shrimp
  are normally found swimming gracefully on their backs with the swimming
  appendages faced up toward the light.  These organisms frequently rest
  on their dorsal side at the bottom sediments (Ward and Whipple 1918).   Life History Reproduction requires both the male and female
  for C. bundyi since they are not
  hermaphroditic.  Testes and ovaries are located on either side of the
  digestive tract and within the genital segment respectively for males and
  females.  The males begin by taking a dorsal position to the female with
  their second antennae clutched onto the females
  genital segment (Pennak 1953).  The male will
  turn its body at a particular angle to the female so that it can curve its
  posterior end and join its genital segment with the external uterine chamber
  of the female (Pennak 1953).  The process of
  copulation only takes a few seconds or minutes, but the pair may stay
  together for days before separating. The female carries its eggs in an oval brood
  sac for one to several days before being released into the water.  The
  eggs are released in separate clutches (1-6 total) with anywhere from 10 to
  250 eggs per clutch (Pennak 1953).  Some of
  these eggs become resting eggs as they dry out or are frozen until conditions
  are appropriate to hatch.  The resting period usually lasts about six to
  ten months under normal conditions (Pennak  1953). The eggs of fairy shrimp hatch into a naupliar
  stage with three pairs of appendages, which will become the first antennae,
  second antennae, and mandibles in the adults (Pennak
  1953).  These nauplii will go through a series of instars where they
  will shed their exoskeleton in order to grow. 
  Throughout these instars, the appendages will increase in number, size, and
  complexity (Pennak 1953).  At the sixth
  instar, all the appendages are present, but it is not until the sixteenth
  instar that sexual maturity is achieved (Pennak
  1953).  Instars for the genus Artemia can be observed in Figures
  3, 4, and 5 respectively at days one, three, and five after hatching.  Artemia
  are from the same order as fairy shrimp and show many similarities in
  their physical appearance as nauplii. Literature Cited Dexter, R.W.  1953.  Studies on
  North American fairy shrimps with the description of two new species. 
  The American Midland Naturalist 49(3):751-771. Knight, A.W., R.L. Lippson,
  and M.A. Simmons.  1975.  The effect of temperature on the oxygen
  consumption of two species of fairy shrimp.  The American Midland
  Naturalist 94(1):236-240. Pennak, R.W.  1953.  Fresh-water invertebrates of
  the United States.  The Ronald Press Company.  326-340. Ward, H.B. and G.C. Whipple.  1918. 
  Fresh-water Biology.  John Wiley and Sons, Inc.  558-571. |   Figure 1. Male fairy shrimp
  with distinguishing ribbon-like antennal appendages and small serrations on
  the 2nd antennae.   Figure 2. Female fairy shrimp
  with a prominent egg sac, 11 pairs of swimming appendages, and a compact
  head. 
 Figure 3. The forked tail or
  telson with two cercopods and numerous long
  filaments. 
 Figure 4.  Day one
  nauplius of Artemia. 
 Figure 5.  Day three
  nauplius of Artemia.   
 Figure 6.  Day five
  nauplius of Artemia.   |