Sammarco Paul W, Porter Scott A, Genazzio Melissa, Sinclair James
Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium (LUMCON), 8124 Hwy. 56, Chauvin, LA 70344-2110, United States of America.
Department of Oceanography and Coastal Sciences, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA 70803, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2015 Dec 18;10(12):e0144581. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0144581. eCollection 2015.
Invasion success by an alien species is dependent upon rate of reproduction, growth, mortality, physical characteristics of the environment, and successful competition for resources with native species. For sessile, epibenthic marine species, one critical resource is space. We examined competitive success in two invasive Indo-Pacific corals involved in competition for space in the northern Gulf of Mexico-Tubastraea coccinea and T. micranthus-on up to 13 offshore oil/gas platforms south of the Mississippi River. Still-capture photos of thousands of overgrowth interactions between the target corals and other sessile epibenthic fauna were analyzed from ROV videos collected at 8-183 m depth. T. micranthus was observed overgrowing >90% of all sessile epibenthic species which it encountered. Frequencies of competitive success varied significantly between platforms. T. coccinea was competitively superior to all competitors pooled, at the 60% level. There was little variability between T. coccinea populations. T. coccinea encountered the following species most frequently-the encrusting sponges Xestospongia sp. (with the commensal Parazoanthus catenularis), X. carbonaria, Dictyonella funicularis, Mycale carmigropila, Phorbas amaranthus, and Haliclona vansoesti-and was found to be, on average, competitively superior to them. Both T. micranthus and T. coccinea appear to be good competitors for space against these species in the northern Gulf of Mexico. Competitive success in T. micranthus was highest in the NE part of the study area, and lowest in the SW area near the Mississippi River plume. T. coccinea's competitive success peaked in the SW study area. This suggests that variation in competitive success both within and between populations of these species may be due to differences in local environmental factors.
外来物种的入侵成功取决于繁殖率、生长速度、死亡率、环境的物理特征以及与本地物种争夺资源的成功程度。对于固着的浅海海洋物种来说,一个关键资源是空间。我们研究了参与墨西哥湾北部空间竞争的两种入侵性印度-太平洋珊瑚——球菊珊瑚和微小菊珊瑚——在密西西比河以南多达13个近海石油/天然气平台上的竞争成功情况。从在8 - 183米深度收集的遥控水下机器人(ROV)视频中,分析了数千次目标珊瑚与其他固着浅海动物之间的覆盖相互作用的静态照片。观察到微小菊珊瑚覆盖了其遇到的所有固着浅海物种的90%以上。不同平台之间竞争成功的频率差异显著。球菊珊瑚在60%的水平上比所有汇总的竞争对手更具竞争力。球菊珊瑚种群之间的变异性很小。球菊珊瑚最常遇到以下物种——覆盖型海绵Xestospongia属(与共生的链状拟海葵一起)、X. carbonaria、绳状网海绵、卡氏密网海绵、紫红佛贝海绵、苋菜海绵和范氏哈氏海绵——并且发现它平均比这些物种更具竞争力。在墨西哥湾北部,微小菊珊瑚和球菊珊瑚在与这些物种争夺空间方面似乎都是优秀的竞争者。微小菊珊瑚的竞争成功在研究区域的东北部最高,在靠近密西西比河羽流的西南部最低。球菊珊瑚的竞争成功在西南部研究区域达到峰值。这表明这些物种在种群内部和种群之间竞争成功的差异可能是由于当地环境因素的不同。