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-List Of Titles -Demographic consequences of an ontogenetic shift by a sea urchin in response to host plant chemistry

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/97804

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Title
Demographic consequences of an ontogenetic shift by a sea urchin in response to host plant chemistry
Related
Ecology, Vol. 85, No. 5 (2004), p.1355-1371
DOI
10.1890/02-4083
Publisher
Ecological Society of America
Date
2004
FoR/RFCD Code(s)
060200 Ecology
Author/Creator
Williamson, Jane E
Author/Creator
Carson, David G
Author/Creator
de Nys, Rocky
Author/Creator
Steinberg, Peter D
Description
Habitat selection that maximizes both larval settlement success and subsequent juvenile and adult performance is a fundamental challenge for marine benthic organisms with complex life histories (e.g., planktonic larvae). For benthic herbivores, chemical cues from macroalgae can strongly influence both larval settlement/metamorphosis and subsequent performance. We compared the effects of chemical cues from host algae on different life history stages of the “arboreal” sea urchin Holopneustes purpurascens. In sublittoral habitats near Sydney, Australia, H. purpurascens occurred primarily on two algal hosts: red alga (Delisea pulchra) and kelp (Ecklonia radiata). Urchins on E. radiata were significantly larger than those on D. pulchra, but no recruits occurred on E. radiata. In experiments, larvae rapidly metamorphosed in the presence of D. pulchra, but metamorphosis was delayed or nonexistent in the presence of E. radiata. D. pulchra produces a polar chemical inducer of metamorphosis not found in E. radiata. In contrast to larval metamorphosis, feeding and performance of juvenile and adult urchins were considerably worse on D. pulchra than on E. radiata. Feeding experiments confirmed that nonpolar metabolites (halogenated furanones) in D. pulchra deter feeding. Adding natural concentrations of the most abundant furanone to otherwise palatable diets completely inhibited feeding. Urchins fed D. pulchra had reduced survival, growth, and reproduction compared to those fed E. radiata. H. purpurascens did not thrive on the alga on which they preferentially settled; therefore, postrecruitment movement from D. pulchra to E. radiata was crucial to fitness. Urchins in D. pulchra beds moved between plants at night and preferred E. radiata in habitat preference experiments. Movement was constrained by diurnal predators, particularly damselfish Parma microlepis. When H. purpurascens was removed from their algal hosts during the day (but not at night), P. microlepis “clipped” their spines and tube feet. Removal of 10% of an urchin's spines and tube feet was fatal. H. purpurascens recruits onto a host that does not support persistence of the benthic phase and then shifts host plants, incurring a predation risk. Though chemically mediated, ontogenetic shifts in host plant use are known for insect herbivores, this is the first known example in a marine herbivore.
Description
17 page(s)
Subject Keyword
060200 Ecology
Subject Keyword
Australia
Subject Keyword
Delisea pulchra
Subject Keyword
secondary metabolites
Subject Keyword
Ecklonia radiata
Subject Keyword
habitat preference
Subject Keyword
herbivory
Subject Keyword
Holopneustes purpurascens
Subject Keyword
life history
Subject Keyword
macroalgae
Subject Keyword
mesograzers
Subject Keyword
plant–herbivore interactions
Resource Type
journal article
Organisation
Macquarie University. Dept. of Biological Sciences

Identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/97804
Identifier
ISSN:0012-9658
Identifier
mq-rm-2009007148
Language
eng
Reviewed
Reviewed
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Citation Format
E-mail Address
Subject
"Ecology"
 
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