A. franciscana uses two different reproductive strategies: through
oviparity (laying eggs which develop and hatch outside the body), or
ovoviviparity (eggs develop and hatch inside the mother's body but is nourished by the yolk rather than placenta).
A. franciscana allocates energy into
gamete and offspring production, as the quality of the zygote will determine the survival.
Oviparity Females that utilize oviparity maintain
embryos that are provided with a thick shell from the shell gland of a female and enter a period of dormancy. This allows the embryo to hatch later on, depending on ideal environmental conditions. It provides them an evolutionary advantage, and can result in overlapping generations. It can also result in the ability to produce eggs to survive and hatch later, in response to extreme or stressful environments, ensuring the next generation continues. Oviparity is triggered by extreme salinity and temperature,
hypoxia, lack of food, short
photoperiods, among other stressors. Food availability significantly influences reproductive strategy as lower food levels will tend to favor oviparity(reproduction through cysts).
Ovoviviparity Ovoviviparity involves embryos developing inside eggs which are retained within the mother's body, hatching internally before live birth. As food abundance increased,
A. franciscana shifted toward ovoviviparity for offspring production. This suggests that
A. franciscana reproductive behavior depends on salinity and temperature. == Mating and behavior ==