| Literature DB >> 30416885 |
Juan Höfer1,2, Humberto E González1,2, Jürgen Laudien3, Gertraud M Schmidt3, Verena Häussermann4,5, Claudio Richter3,6.
Abstract
The feeding behavior of the cosmopolitan cold-water coral (CWC) Desmophyllum dianthus (Cnidaria: Scleractinia) is still poorly known. Its usual deep distribution restricts direct observations, and manipulative experiments are so far limited to prey that do not occur in CWC natural habitat. During a series of replicated incubations, we assessed the functional response of this coral feeding on a medium-sized copepod (Calanoides patagoniensis) and a large euphausiid (Euphausia vallentini). Corals showed a Type I functional response, where feeding rate increased linearly with prey abundance, as predicted for a tentaculate passive suspension feeder. No significant differences in feeding were found between prey items, and corals were able to attain a maximum feeding rate of 10.99 mg C h-1, which represents an ingestion of the 11.4% of the coral carbon biomass per hour. These findings suggest that D. dianthus is a generalist zooplankton predator capable of exploiting dense aggregations of zooplankton over a wide prey size-range.Entities:
Keywords: Calanoides patagoniensis; Cold-water coral; Coral feeding; Desmophyllum dianthus; Euphausia vallentini; Functional response
Year: 2018 PMID: 30416885 PMCID: PMC6223235 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.5872
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Details of incubations used to assess the functional response of D. dianthus.
| Date | Prey type | Min PA | Max PA | Start time | End time | O2 con | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 11/09/2016 | EV | 1.26 | 11.39 | 9 | 00:30 | 03:30 | 8.8 |
| 13/09/2016 | CP | 2.53 | 22.78 | 6 | 23:30 | 02:30 | 1.7 |
| 15/12/2016 | EV | 1.26 | 10.12 | 8 | 01:00 | 04:00 | 5.4 |
| 17/12/2016 | CP | 5.06 | 25.31 | 9 | 23:00 | 02:00 | 2.2 |
| 06/05/2017 | EV | 1.26 | 11.39 | 8 | 23:30 | 02:30 | 3.2 |
| 14/05/2017 | CP | 6.33 | 50.63 | 8 | 23:30 | 02:30 | 4.1 |
| global | EV | 1.26 | 11.39 | 25 | 5.8 | ||
| global | CP | 2.53 | 50.63 | 23 | 2.7 |
Notes:
Date of the incubation, prey type, minimum prey abundance (Min PA, prey L−1), maximum prey abundance (Max PA, prey L−1), number of corals used (N), incubation starting time (Start time), incubation ending time (End time) and mean % of oxygen consumed during incubations (O2 con). CP and EV stand for Calanoides patagoniensis and Euphausia vallentini, respectively.
During this incubation two bottles were discarded before starting the functional response experiment due to unhealthy (i.e., non-swimming) copepods.
The corals used for these incubations were collected on different days.
Figure 1Coral in the laboratory at the end of an incubation.
(A) Specimen of D. dianthus inside an incubation bottle. (B) Fully extended tentacles of the same coral in detail. Photo by N. García-Herrera.
Figure 2Scatter plot showing the prey abundance (number of prey L−1) and the proportion of prey (parts per unit) ingested by corals (°/ h−1).
(A) Data for C. patagoniensis incubations. (B) Data for E. vallentini incubations. Solid black lines represent the mean proportion of prey ingested by feeding corals, while dashed gray lines correspond to the non-significant second-order logistic regression fits.
Functional response type.
| Prey | First-order term | Second-order term |
|---|---|---|
| 0.63 (0.81) | −1.08 (0.68) | |
| 4.38 (0.34) | −3.11 (0.43) |
Note:
Terms and their p-value (inside brackets) for the second-order logistic regressions used to analyze the relationship between prey abundance and the proportion of prey ingested by corals (i.e., analysis to determine functional response type).
Figure 3Scatter plot showing the relationship between prey abundance (prey L−1) and coral ingestion rate (mg C h−1).
(A) Data for C. patagoniensis. (B) Data for E. vallentini. Solid lines represent linear fits, whereas dashed lines correspond to their 95% confidence intervals.
Model selection for the linear and logarithmic models fitted to coral ingestion rate and prey abundance for C. patagoniensis and E. vallentini.
| Prey | Fit | AICc | Delta AICc | AICc Wt | Cum Wt | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Logarithmic | 242.74 | 5.33 | 0.07 | 1.00 | 0.81 | <0.001 | |
| Logarithmic | 111.08 | 2.71 | 0.21 | 1.00 | 0.64 | <0.001 |
Note:
The best fitting model according to second order Akaike Information Criterion (AICc) is bolded. The table also shows the difference in AICc between both models (Delta AICc), the relative weight of each model (AICc Wt), the cumulative weight of the models (Cum Wt), the proportion of the variance explained by each model (R2) and model significance (p-value).
Figure 4Scatter plot showing the relationship between prey biomass (mg C L−1) and coral daily ration (% of coral carbon biomass d−1).
(A) Data for C. patagoniensis. (B) Data for E. vallentini. Black solid lines represent linear fits, whereas black dashed lines correspond to their 95% confidence intervals. Gray dashed lines correspond to a linear regression with a slope of 4.85.