Whalan Steve, Wahab Muhammad A Abdul, Sprungala Susanne, Poole Andrew J, de Nys Rocky
Marine Ecology Research Centre, School of Environment, Science and Engineering, Southern Cross University, PO Box 157, Lismore, 2480, New South Wales, Australia.
MACRO-the Centre for Macroalgal Resources and Biotechnology, James Cook University, Townsville, 4811, Queensland, Australia; Australian Institute of Marine Science, PMB 3 Townsville, Queensland, 4810, Australia; AIMS@JCU, James Cook University, Townsville, 4811, Queensland, Australia.
PLoS One. 2015 Feb 11;10(2):e0117675. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0117675. eCollection 2015.
For sessile marine invertebrates with complex life cycles, habitat choice is directed by the larval phase. Defining which habitat-linked cues are implicated in sessile invertebrate larval settlement has largely concentrated on chemical cues which are thought to signal optimal habitat. There has been less effort establishing physical settlement cues, including the role of surface microtopography. This laboratory based study tested whether surface microtopography alone (without chemical cues) plays an important contributing role in the settlement of larvae of coral reef sessile invertebrates. We measured settlement to tiles, engineered with surface microtopography (holes) that closely matched the sizes (width) of larvae of a range of corals and sponges, in addition to surfaces with holes that were markedly larger than larvae. Larvae from two species of scleractinian corals (Acropora millepora and Ctenactis crassa) and three species of coral reef sponges (Luffariella variabilis, Carteriospongia foliascens and Ircinia sp.,) were used in experiments. L. variabilis, A. millepora and C. crassa showed markedly higher settlement to surface microtopography that closely matched their larval width. C. foliascens and Ircinia sp., showed no specificity to surface microtopography, settling just as often to microtopography as to flat surfaces. The findings of this study question the sole reliance on chemical based larval settlement cues, previously established for some coral and sponge species, and demonstrate that specific physical cues (surface complexity) can also play an important role in larval settlement of coral reef sessile invertebrates.
对于具有复杂生命周期的固着海洋无脊椎动物而言,栖息地选择由幼体阶段决定。确定哪些与栖息地相关的线索参与固着无脊椎动物幼体的附着,很大程度上集中在被认为是最佳栖息地信号的化学线索上。在确定物理附着线索方面所做的工作较少,包括表面微观地形的作用。这项基于实验室的研究测试了仅表面微观地形(无化学线索)是否在珊瑚礁固着无脊椎动物幼体的附着过程中发挥重要作用。除了有明显大于幼体的孔洞的表面外,我们测量了幼体在带有与一系列珊瑚和海绵幼体大小(宽度)紧密匹配的表面微观地形(孔洞)的瓷砖上的附着情况。实验使用了两种石珊瑚(多孔鹿角珊瑚和厚梳珊瑚)和三种珊瑚礁海绵(多变扁海绵、叶状卡特海绵和肉芝软珊瑚属的一种)的幼体。多变扁海绵、多孔鹿角珊瑚和厚梳珊瑚在与它们幼体宽度紧密匹配的表面微观地形上的附着明显更高。叶状卡特海绵和肉芝软珊瑚属的一种对表面微观地形没有特异性,在微观地形上的附着频率与在平坦表面上相同。这项研究的结果对先前为一些珊瑚和海绵物种确定的仅依赖基于化学的幼体附着线索提出了质疑,并表明特定的物理线索(表面复杂性)在珊瑚礁固着无脊椎动物幼体的附着中也可以发挥重要作用。