Faculty of Science and Engineering, Southern Cross University, Lismore, New South Wales, Australia.
PLoS One. 2023 Jul 10;18(7):e0287989. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0287989. eCollection 2023.
Deciphering the behavioural ecology of adult (sessile) sponges is challenging. However, their motile larval stages afford opportunities to investigate how behaviour contributes to dispersal and selection of habitat. Light is a fundamental cue contributing to larval sponge dispersal where photoreceptive cells contribute to this process. But how universal is light as a cue to sponge larval dispersal and settlement? Behavioural choice experiments were used to test the effect of light on dispersal and settlement behaviours. Larvae of the tropical sponge species Coscinoderma mathewsi, Luffariella variabilis, Ircinia microconnulosa, and Haliclona sp., from deep (12-15 m) and shallower-water habitats (2-5 m), were used in experiments. Dispersal experiments provided a light-gradient-choice where light represented light attenuation with depth. Light treatments included white light and the spectral components of red and blue light. Settlement experiments comprised a choice between illuminated and shaded treatments. Fluorescence microscopy was used to establish the presence of fluorescent proteins associated with posterior locomotory cilia. Deeper-water species, C. mathewsi and I. microconnulosa discriminate light spectral signatures. Both species changed dispersal behaviour to light spectra as larvae aged. For C. mathewsi positive phototaxis to blue light changed to photophobic responses (all light treatments) after six hours and behaviours in I. microconnulosa changed from positive to negative phototaxis (white light) after six hours. L. variabilis, also a deeper-water species, was negatively phototactic to all light treatments. Larvae from the shallow-water species, Haliclona sp., moved towards all light wavelengths tested. There was no effect of light on settlement of the shallow-water Haliclona sp., but larvae in all three deeper-water species showed significantly higher settlement in shaded treatments. Fluorescence microscopy showed discrete fluorescent bands contiguous to posterior tufted cilia in all four species. These fluorescent bands may play a contributory role in larval photobehaviour.
解析成年(固着)海绵的行为生态学具有挑战性。然而,它们的游动幼虫阶段为研究行为如何促进扩散和栖息地选择提供了机会。光是促进海绵幼虫扩散的基本线索,感光细胞有助于这一过程。但是,光是海绵幼虫扩散和定居的普遍线索吗?行为选择实验用于测试光对扩散和定居行为的影响。来自深海(12-15 米)和浅水区(2-5 米)的热带海绵物种 Coscinoderma mathewsi、Luffariella variabilis、Ircinia microconnulosa 和 Haliclona sp 的幼虫用于实验。扩散实验提供了一个光梯度选择,其中光代表随深度的光衰减。光照处理包括白光和红蓝光谱成分。定居实验包括在照明和遮蔽处理之间进行选择。荧光显微镜用于确定与后向运动纤毛相关的荧光蛋白的存在。深海物种 C. mathewsi 和 I. microconnulosa 区分光的光谱特征。随着幼虫的生长,这两个物种的扩散行为都对光的光谱做出了反应。对于 C. mathewsi,对蓝光的正趋光性在六小时后变为负趋光性(所有光照处理),而 I. microconnulosa 的行为则从正趋光性(白光)变为负趋光性。同样是深海物种的 L. variabilis 对所有光照处理都表现出负趋光性。来自浅水区物种 Haliclona sp. 的幼虫向所有测试的光波长移动。光对浅水区 Haliclona sp. 的定居没有影响,但所有三个深海物种的幼虫在遮蔽处理中的定居率明显更高。荧光显微镜显示,所有四个物种的后簇状纤毛上都有离散的荧光带。这些荧光带可能在幼虫的光行为中起作用。