4.4 Article

Bitten down to size: Fish predation determines growth form of the Caribbean coral reef sponge Mycale laevis

Journal

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.jembe.2009.04.007

Keywords

Chemical defense; Growth form; Predation; Refugia; Trophic cascade

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [OCE-0550468]
  2. NOAA/NURC [NA96RU-0260]
  3. UNCW-GSA

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Interactions between organisms add complexity to ecosystem function, particularly on coral reefs. The Caribbean orange icing sponge Mycale laevis is semi-cryptic, often growing under coral colonies or between coral branches. This association is reportedly a mutualism, with the sponge deterring boring sponges from invading the coral skeleton and the coral providing an expanding surface for sponge growth. But is there an alternative explanation for the proximity of sponge and coral? We examined the importance of fish predation on the growth of the sponge. While the semi-cryptic growth form of M. laevis predominates on reefs off the Florida Keys and the Bahamas Islands, M. laevis grows with a non-cryptic, erect morphology off Bocas del Toro, Panama. Surveys revealed that sponge-eating fishes were rare or absent at Bocas del Toro compared to sites in the Florida Keys. Because past studies were inconsistent about the palatability of M. laevis to fish predators, we conducted feeding experiments with sponges from all three sites. Crude organic extracts of M. laevis from all three sites were palatable to generalist fish predators in aquarium assays, and field feeding assays and caging experiments conducted in the Florida Keys confirmed that spongivorous fishes readily ate exposed fragments of M. laevis. Our results suggest that M. laevis is restricted to its semi-cryptic growth form by spongivorous predators, with corals providing a physical refuge from predation. This alternative explanation supports the broader hypothesis that Caribbean reef sponges can be categorized on the basis of chemical defense into defended, palatable, and preferred species, the last of which are restricted to refugia. (C) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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