The Columbus Dispatch

When water collects, shrimp burst to life

- Voila, JIM MCCORMAC Naturalist Jim McCormac writes a column for The Dispatch on the first, third and fifth Sundays of the month. He also writes about nature at www.jimmccorma­c. blogspot.com.

On Independen­ce Day in 1972, Harold von Braunhut was awarded a patent for “Sea-Monkeys.” They already had become the stuff of legend; he had been selling the seemingly magical creatures under that name for a decade.

One need only buy a packet of eggs, add water and soon Sea-Monkeys will be swimming around the aquarium. They are actually a type of brine shrimp, and the eggs are in a state of cryptobios­is, a dormancy broken by moisture.

A wild Ohio counterpar­t of Sea-Monkeys are fairy shrimp. These small crustacean­s also burst to life when they hit water, but their aquariums are vernal pools.

Vernal pools are small, highly specialize­d wetlands that normally only hold water seasonally. Fueled by snowmelt and spring rains, they peak from late February into May and have largely dried out by summer’s onset.

During their brief saturation, vernal pools become nurseries for an astonishin­g array of life. You’ll often hear the pool before you see it, courtesy of the cacophony created by spring peepers and western chorus frogs.

Early-season warm rains send armies of salamander­s marching to the ponds. There, large congresses of the amphibians writhe in a short-lived mating frenzy, leaving their spawn to develop in the pools.

Massive, predatory diving beetles scoot through the water, seizing small animal prey. Casemaker caddisflie­s trundle along, wearing ghillie suits of twigs. Gorgeous wood ducks stop to feast on the bounty, whistling highpitche­d squeals when flushed.

Arguably the most interestin­g organisms are the fairy shrimp. These inch-long creatures are confined to vernal pools and adulthood lasts only two months or so.

I recently was shown a beautiful vernal pool in Zaleski State Forest in Vinton County by biologist Laura Hughes. Our visit occurred after nightfall, the better to see salamander activity. Upon shining our lights into the water, we noticed scads of fairy shrimp wafting about.

The creatures had recently emerged, their eggs having lain dormant in the pool’s muck for the past ten months. Like the Sea-Monkeys, the addition of water to the vernal pool had awoken them from their embryonic slumber.

Delicate and graceful, the shrimp are powered by eleven pairs of feathery legs. When alarmed, the animals dart away with a rapid burst of speed. They, like other life-forms drawn to the pool, are there primarily to reproduce. Plankton and other tiny organic matter fuel them.

Soon after mating, the female develops up to 150 hard, cystlike eggs. These are visible through a translucen­t pouch on her midsection. When released, the eggs fall into detritus on the pool’s bottom. They can withstand drought, extreme cold and heat.

The next spring, the eggs will release larval shrimp to begin the cycle anew.

Since colonizati­on by Europeans, Ohio has lost about 90 percent of its wetlands. Vernal pools have been hard-hit. Their small size and isolated distributi­on make them especially vulnerable to developmen­t.

Vernal pools are treasure troves of fascinatin­g biological diversity and those that remain should be protected at all costs.

 ?? [JIM MCCORMAC/FOR THE DISPATCH] ?? Fairy shrimp, such as this male, hatch from eggs that are laid in the mating frenzy of vernal pools. The eggs also can survive Ohio’s harsh winters.
[JIM MCCORMAC/FOR THE DISPATCH] Fairy shrimp, such as this male, hatch from eggs that are laid in the mating frenzy of vernal pools. The eggs also can survive Ohio’s harsh winters.
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