Like all amphipods, P. walkeri are sexually dimorphic:[3] the males may grow up to 21.7 millimetres (0.85 in); females, 22.8 millimetres (0.90 in). Newborns are approximately 2.5 millimetres (0.098 in). Males mature after 14–15 months, at about 50% their final size.[4] Juvenile P. walkeri are more sensitive to hydrocarbons, such as from oil spills, than older specimens.[5]
Distribution
P. walkeri live in the benthic zone of the Southern Ocean, all around Antarctica, down to a depth of 310 metres (1,020 ft).[2] During the early winter, P. walkeri migrate upward to the ice, and many congregate around patches of algae,[6] in such abundance that they nearly cover the underside of the sea ice sheets.[7] They are also found in the sublittoral zone, and the bottom level of other shallow locations around the Antarctic coast.[8]
During a female's second (occasionally third) winter, she releases pheromones, picked up by a male's antennae, signaling that readiness to mate.[4] The male then clings on to the female until she molts. The male releases its sperm into the female's marsupium, and the female releases up to 200 eggs.[3][7] When the sea water becomes diluted, the eggs may swell up, to keep the total salinity around the embryos constant. They develop for four-and-a-half months, then hatch in the marsupium. The brooding young remain there for up to a month.[7][2][3]
^ abcDe Broyer, C., J.K. Lowry, K. Jazdzewski and H. Robert 2007 Catalogue of the Gammaridean and Corophiidean Amphipoda (Crustacea) of the Southern Ocean, with distribution and ecological data. In C. De Broyer (ed.), Census of Antarctic Marine Life: Synopsis of the Amphipoda of the Southern Ocean. Vol. I. Bulletin de l'Institut royal des Sciences naturelles de Belgique van het koninklijk Belgisch Instituut voor Natuurwetenschappen. Biologie 77(suppl.1):1–325 — via Sea Life Base. Retrieved July 27, 2017.
^ abcRuppert, E.E., R.S. Fox and R.D. Barnes 2004 Invertebrate Zoology. A functional evolutionary approach. 7th Ed. Brooks/Cole, Thomson Learning learning, Inc. 990 p. — via Sea Life Base. Retrieved July 27, 2017.
^ abcSims, D.W.; Southward, Alan J. (September 26, 2006). "Amphipods". Advances in Marine Biology. 51. Academic Press: 243, 259, 289. ISBN9780080464527 – via Google Books.