Although with a
pelagic larva, many species can increase their dispersal range and decrease the risk of
inbreeding, a larva comes with challenges: Marine larvae risk being washed away without finding a suitable habitat for settlement. Therefore, they have evolved many sensory systems:
Sensory systems Magnetic fields Far from shore, larvae are able to use magnetic fields to orient themselves towards the coast over large spatial scales. There is additional evidence that species can recognize anomalies in the magnetic field to return to the same location multiple times throughout their life. and taxa that lack developed eyes, such as
schyphozoans, use phototaxis to find shaded areas to settle away from predators. Phototaxis is not the only mechanism that guides larvae by light. The larvae of the
annelid Platynereis dumerilii do not only show positive and negative phototaxis over a broad range of the light spectrum, but swim down to the
center of gravity when they are exposed to non-directional
UV-light. This behavior is a UV-induced positive
gravitaxis. This gravitaxis and negative phototaxis induced by light coming from the water surface form a ratio-metric
depth-gauge. Such a depth gauge is based on the different
attenuation of light across the different
wavelengths in water. In clear water blue light (470 nm) penetrates the deepest.
Sound Marine larvae use sound and vibrations to find a good habitat where they can settle and
metamorphose into juveniles. This behavior has been seen in fish Many families of coral reef fish are particularly attracted to high-
frequency sounds produced by invertebrates, which larvae use as an indicator of food availability and complex habitat where they may be protected from predators. It is thought that larvae avoid low frequency sounds because they may be associated with transient fish or predators There is concern that changes in
community structure in
nursery habitats, such as
seagrass beds,
kelp forests, and
mangroves, could lead to a collapse in larval recruitment due to a decrease in sound-producing invertebrates. Other researchers argue that larvae may still successfully find a place to settle even if one cue is unreliable.
Olfaction Many marine organisms use
olfaction (chemical cues in the form of scent) to locate a safe area to metamorphose at the end of their larval stage. and
invertebrates. Research has shown that larvae are able to distinguish between water from the open ocean and water from more suitable nursery habitats such as
lagoons Chemical cues can be extremely useful for larvae, but may not have a constant presence, as water input can depend on currents and tidal flow.
Human impacts on sensory systems Recent research in the field of larval sensory biology has begun focusing more on how human impacts and environmental disturbance affect settlement rates and larval interpretation of different habitat cues.
Ocean acidification due to
anthropogenic climate change and
sedimentation have become areas of particular interest.
Ocean acidification Although several behaviours of coral reef fish, including larvae, has been found to be detrimentally affected from projected end-of-21st-century ocean acidification in previous experiments, a 2020 replication study found that "end-of-century ocean acidification levels have negligible effects on [three] important behaviours of coral reef fishes" and with "data simulations, [showed] that the large effect sizes and small within-group variances that have been reported in several previous studies are highly improbable". In 2021, it emerged that some of the previous studies about coral reef fish behaviour changes have been accused of being fraudulent. Furthermore,
effect sizes of studies assessing ocean acidification effects on fish behaviour have declined dramatically over a decade of research on this topic, with effects appearing negligible since 2015. Ocean acidification has been shown to alter the way that pelagic larvae are able to process information and production of the cues themselves. Acidification can alter larval interpretations of sounds, particularly in fish, leading to settlement in suboptimal habitat. Though the mechanism for this process is still not fully understood, some studies indicate that this breakdown may be due to a decrease in size or density of their otoliths. Furthermore, sounds produced by invertebrates that larvae rely on as an indicator of habitat quality can also change due to acidification. For example,
snapping shrimp produce different sounds that larvae may not recognize under acidified conditions due to differences in shell
calcification. Red color cues that coral larvae use to find crustose
coralline algae, with which they have a
commensal relationship, may also be in danger due to algal bleaching.
Sedimentation Sediment runoff, from natural storm events or human development, can also impact larval sensory systems and survival. One study focusing on red soil found that increased turbidity due to runoff negatively influenced the ability of fish larvae to interpret visual cues. More unexpectedly, they also found that red soil can also impair olfactory capabilities. == Self-recruitment ==