Department II - Systematic Zoology, LMU Munich, 82152 Planegg-Martinsried, Germany.
Department II - Systematic Zoology, LMU Munich, 82152 Planegg-Martinsried, Germany.
Curr Biol. 2021 Jul 12;31(13):R836-R837. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2021.05.031.
'Who eats whom?' is a fundamental question about the ecological roles and interactions of deep-sea organisms. However, the tools needed to analyze trophic relationships remain limited, especially with regard to studying meiofauna and small macrofauna in abyssal and hadal depths. We present results from indirect molecular analyses of the gut contents of abyssal and hadal Solenogastres (Mollusca, Aplacophora) of the Northwest Pacific. Our data revealed a high food specialization and a surprising diversity of food sources among these inconspicuous worm-shaped predators. We hypothesize that Hydrozoa forms the ancestral food source of Solenogastres, and that specialization on non-cnidarian prey (such as annelids, nemerteans, and bivalves) evolved independently along with modifications in the digestive tract. Despite being intuitively advantageous in the nutrient-limited deep sea, we found only one widespread generalist feeder (potentially associated with scavenging).
“谁吃谁?”是关于深海生物生态角色和相互作用的一个基本问题。然而,用于分析营养关系的工具仍然有限,特别是在研究深海和超深渊的小型后生动物和小型大型动物时。我们展示了西北太平洋深海和超深渊等足目动物(软体动物,无板纲)肠道内容物的间接分子分析结果。我们的数据显示,这些不起眼的蠕虫状捕食者具有高度的食物专业化和令人惊讶的多种食物来源。我们假设水螅纲是等足目动物的原始食物来源,并且对非刺胞动物猎物(如环节动物、纽形动物和双壳类动物)的专门化与消化道的改变是独立进化的。尽管在营养有限的深海中具有直观的优势,但我们只发现了一种广泛存在的一般性摄食者(可能与食腐有关)。