| Literature DB >> 25414524 |
Abstract
Giant clams, the largest living bivalves, live in close association with coral reefs throughout the Indo-Pacific. These iconic invertebrates perform numerous important ecological roles as well as serve as flagship species-drawing attention to the ongoing destruction of coral reefs and their associated biodiversity. To date, no review of giant clams has focussed on their behaviour, yet this component of their autecology is critical to their life history and hence conservation. Almost 100 articles published between 1865 and 2014 include behavioural observations, and these have been collated and synthesised into five sections: spawning, locomotion, feeding, anti-predation, and stress responses. Even though the exact cues for spawning in the wild have yet to be elucidated, giant clams appear to display diel and lunar periodicities in reproduction, and for some species, peak breeding seasons have been established. Perhaps surprisingly, giant clams have considerable mobility, ranging from swimming and gliding as larvae to crawling in juveniles and adults. Chemotaxis and geotaxis have been established, but giant clams are not phototactic. At least one species exhibits clumping behaviour, which may enhance physical stabilisation, facilitate reproduction, or provide protection from predators. Giant clams undergo several shifts in their mode of acquiring nutrition; starting with a lecithotrophic and planktotrophic diet as larvae, switching to pedal feeding after metamorphosis followed by the transition to a dual mode of filter feeding and phototrophy once symbiosis with zooxanthellae (Symbiodinium spp.) is established. Because of their shell weight and/or byssal attachment, adult giant clams are unable to escape rapidly from threats using locomotion. Instead, they exhibit a suite of visually mediated anti-predation behaviours that include sudden contraction of the mantle, valve adduction, and squirting of water. Knowledge on the behaviour of giant clams will benefit conservation and restocking efforts and help fine-tune mariculture techniques. Understanding the repertoire of giant clam behaviours will also facilitate the prediction of threshold levels for sustainable exploitation as well as recovery rates of depleted clam populations.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25414524 PMCID: PMC4231208 DOI: 10.1007/s00227-014-2545-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Biol ISSN: 0025-3162 Impact factor: 2.573
Locomotive behaviour exhibited by giant clam larvae
| Developmental stage | Time after fertilisation | Locomotive behaviour | Species |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ciliated gastrula | 7–16 h | Active rotation, remains at bottom | TC, TM, TS, HH |
| Trochophore | 12–24 h | Free-swimming, active at surface, translation parallel to and rotation around long axis | TC, TG, TM, TS, HH |
| Veliger | 18–72 h | Active swimming throughout medium | TC, TG, TM, TS, HH, HP |
| Pediveliger | 4–19 days | Alternately crawling, swimming and gliding off bottom | TC, TM, TS, HH, HP |
TC = Tridacna crocea, TG = T. gigas, TM = T. maxima, TS = T. squamosa, HH = Hippopus hippopus, HP = H. porcellanus
Fig. 1Swimming in 8-day-old T. squamosa pediveligers: a a pediveliger just about to leave the substrate, b a pediveliger swimming using its velum—possibly using its foot as a stabiliser
Fig. 2An example of a smaller T. squamosa juvenile (8.5 mm) attached to the valve of a larger T. squamosa individual (27.8 mm), possibly due to overcrowded conditions
Fig. 3Positions of T. squamosa juveniles at the a start of the aggregation experiment and b after 24 h. Image is based on the video stills in Soo and Todd (2012)
Ontological changes in acquiring nutrition
| Developmental stage | Diet | Start (duration) | Source/mode of acquiring nutrition |
|---|---|---|---|
| Larva | Lecithotrophic Planktotrophic | Embryo (unknown) Veliger stage | Egg yolk reserves (Fitt et al. Velum is used for feeding (Carriker |
| Pediveligers | Particulate | After metamorphosis (~1 week) | Pedal feeding (Reid et al. 1. Locomotory pedal feeding 2. Pedal sweep-feeding 3. Pedal probe-feeding |
| Juvenile, Adult | Heterotrophic Phototrophic | Maturation of ctenidia Establishment of symbiosis | Filter feeding (e.g. Yonge Photosynthates from symbiotic zooxanthellae (Streamer et al. |
Fig. 4A juvenile T. squamosa squirting a jet of water from its exhalant siphon
Fig. 5Behaviours associated with different stages of the giant clam’ life cycle