Macroalgae and interspecific alarm cues regulate behavioral interactions between sea urchins and sea cucumbers
Sea urchins and sea cucumbers are mutually beneficial organisms in kelp ecosystem. As herbivores, sea urchins process kelp through feeding and egestion, providing inaccessible food for benthic consumers such as sea cucumbers. Sea urchins in turn profit from the sediment cleaned by sea cucumbers. How...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Scientific reports 2022-03, Vol.12 (1), p.3971-3971, Article 3971 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Sea urchins and sea cucumbers are mutually beneficial organisms in kelp ecosystem. As herbivores, sea urchins process kelp through feeding and egestion, providing inaccessible food for benthic consumers such as sea cucumbers. Sea urchins in turn profit from the sediment cleaned by sea cucumbers. However, behavioral interactions between them remain poorly understood, which greatly hampers our understanding on the relationship between ecologically important benthic species in marine ecosystems and the regulating mechanism. The present study investigated behavioral interactions between sea urchins
Strongylocentrotus intermedius
and sea cucumbers
Apostichopus japonicus
in laboratory conditions. We revealed that the presence of sea urchins caused significant higher speed movement of
A. japonicus
. Interestingly, the negative effects of
S. intermedius
on
A. japonicus
were significantly reduced in the shared macroalgal area. For the first time, we found the interspecific responses to alarm cues between sea cucumbers and sea urchins. Conspecific responses were significantly larger than the interspecific responses in both sea urchins and sea cucumbers. This indicates that interspecific response to alarm cues is an efficient approach to anti-predation and coexistence in mutually beneficial organisms. The present study shed light on the interspecific relationships and coexistence between sea urchins and sea cucumbers in kelp ecosystem. |
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ISSN: | 2045-2322 2045-2322 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41598-022-07889-8 |