7 research outputs found

    Thermal and Sedimentation Stress Are Unlikely Causes of Brown Spot Syndrome in the Coral Reef Sponge, Ianthella basta

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    Background: Marine diseases are being increasingly linked to anthropogenic factors including global and local stressors. On the Great Barrier Reef, up to 66% of the Ianthella basta population was recently found to be afflicted by a syndrome characterized by brown spot lesions and necrotic tissue.\ud \ud Methodology/Principal Findings: Manipulative experiments were undertaken to ascertain the role of environmental stressors in this syndrome. Specifically, the effects of elevated temperature and sedimentation on sponge health and symbiont stability in I. basta were examined. Neither elevated temperature nor increased sedimentation were responsible for the brown spot lesions, but sponges exposed to 32°C developed substantial discoloration and deterioration of their tissues, resulting in death after eight days and a higher microbial diversity in those samples. No shifts in the microbial community of I. basta were observed across a latitudinal gradient or with increased sedimentation, with three previously described symbionts dominating the community of all sponges (Alphaproteobacteria, Gammaproteobacteria and Thaumarchaea).\ud \ud Conclusions/Significance: Results from this study highlight the stable microbial community of I. basta and indicate that thermal and sedimentation stress are not responsible for the brown spot lesions currently affecting this abundant and ecologically important sponge species

    Estimates of Particulate Organic Carbon Flowing from the Pelagic Environment to the Benthos through Sponge Assemblages

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    Despite the importance of trophic interactions between organisms, and the relationship between primary production and benthic diversity, there have been few studies that have quantified the carbon flow from pelagic to benthic environments as a result of the assemblage level activity of suspension-feeding organisms. In this study, we examine the feeding activity of seven common sponge species from the Taputeranga marine reserve on the south coast of Wellington in New Zealand. We analysed the diet composition, feeding efficiency, pumping rates, and the number of food particles (specifically picoplanktonic prokaryotic cells) retained by sponges. We used this information, combined with abundance estimates of the sponges and estimations of the total amount of food available to sponges in a known volume of water (89,821 m3), to estimate: (1) particulate organic carbon (POC) fluxes through sponges as a result of their suspension-feeding activities on picoplankton; and (2) the proportion of the available POC from picoplankton that sponges consume. The most POC acquired by the sponges was from non-photosynthetic bacterial cells (ranging from 0.09 to 4.69 g C d−1 with varying sponge percentage cover from 0.5 to 5%), followed by Prochlorococcus (0.07 to 3.47 g C d−1) and then Synechococcus (0.05 to 2.34 g C d−1) cells. Depending on sponge abundance, the amount of POC that sponges consumed as a proportion of the total POC available was 0.2–12.1% for Bac, 0.4–21.3% for Prochlo, and 0.3–15.8% for Synecho. The flux of POC for the whole sponge assemblage, based on the consumption of prokaryotic picoplankton, ranged from 0.07–3.50 g C m2 d−1. This study is the first to estimate the contribution of a sponge assemblage (rather than focusing on individual sponge species) to POC flow from three groups of picoplankton in a temperate rocky reef through the feeding activity of sponges and demonstrates the importance of sponges to energy flow in rocky reef environments

    Molecular and Functional Ecology of Sponges and Their Microbial Symbionts

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    Sponge-microbe symbiotic interactions are important features of modern marine ecosystems. It is likely that these ancient partnerships are as old as the phylum Porifera. Powerful new tools have exposed remarkable microbial diversity within sponge tissues. We are now able to study the composition and structure of the microbial communities at unprecedented levels of resolution. We also recognize that the partnership cannot be disaggregated and should be considered as an integrated holobiont. New hypotheses (e.g., the sponge loop hypothesis) have opened exciting avenues for future experimental work that link holobiont performance from micro- to macro-perspectives. This type of research has taken on added significance given that our planet is experiencing accelerating rates of ocean warming and ocean acidification. It is essential that we examine how sponges respond to environmental stressors that are increasing in intensity and frequency. This review focuses on the molecular and functional ecology of sponge-based microbial symbioses. We discuss the coevolutionary processes that operate to generate partner specificity or to maintain promiscuous partnerships and consider reciprocal selective forces that shape the material exchanges that occur between the partners. We focus attention on the functional ecological role the holobiont plays in marine habitats. The role that the symbionts play in host physiology, and ultimately in the function of sponges on marine ecosystems, is also discussed. We stand to gain important basic information about symbiotic interactions through the detailed study of sponge-microbe interactions, but important practical lessons will be afforded to resource managers who are looking for strategies to protect aquatic habitats worldwide.Peer reviewe

    The sponge holobiont in a changing ocean: from microbes to ecosystems

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