What’s Going on Down There?? Turf Wars on the Reef!

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What’s Going on Down There?? Turf Wars on the Reef!

Transcript of What’s Going on Down There?? Turf Wars on the Reef!

Page 1: What’s Going on Down There?? Turf Wars on the Reef!

What’s Going on Down There??

Turf Wars on the Reef!

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What are benthic reef creatures?

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Benthic creatures live on the bottom of the ocean

• Often the word benthic refers to the deep ocean but in the case of coral reefs….

• It means creatures that live on the bottom or “floor” of the ocean

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While not as flashy and fast moving as fish, these creatures are the “heart” of the reef

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How many creatures do you see in this photo?

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That last question was tricky….

• Benthic reef creatures consist primarily of corals, algae, sponge and…

• other invertebrates that shelter within reef they create

• In the last photo there were over a dozen species!

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When looking at pictures of a reef, the first thing noticed is the diversity of life. All space on the reef is filled with

different organisms suited to fill every niche

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The Benthic reef environment is a place of constant, slow motion, turf war!

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How do Benthic Reef Creatures Fight for

Survival?

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Survival in the benthic environment is not as easy as it appears!

• Diversity in the benthic reef environment is the result of the organisms evolving through competition.

• One factor underlying this competition is aggression, both subtle and more obvious.

• Aggression occurs in corals as a result of their constant battle for survival.

• Corals have to cope with currents, predation by fish and other invertebrates, as well as competition from neighboring corals for light, nutrients, and food.

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Corals battle algae for space

Coralline algae

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Healthy reefs in Hawaii are often algae-dominated

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However, alien algae species can smother corals!

Reef without alien algae species

Reef smothered by alien algae

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Algae release sugar, fueling bacterial growth on the corals

• These bacteria suffocate the coral by cutting off the supply of oxygen

• Once the corals die, this frees space for more algae to grow

• Over-fishing by humans can reduce the number of fish that graze on algae, thus increasing the amount of algae on the reef

• Nutrients from sewage and agricultural runoff fertilize the algae

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Bubble algae growing over coral

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The battle for a majority of the benthic reef “real estate” involves corals, which deploy both

offensive and defensive weapons in order to survive and reproduce

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Corals acquire and maintain space on a reef by:

• Reproducing and/or growing rapidly

• Competing for available food

• Having offensive and defensive weapons

• Having the ability to sustain damage and still continue to reproduce

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Corals can literally grow over each other

Overtopping: • Fast growing

corals can grow over slower growing corals, blocking their sunlight.

• Overtopping may not always cause death of the shadowed coral

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Living in the shade may limit growth!

• Unlike the terrestrial world, most things growing on the sea floor are animals of some sort.

• They don't move because they get most of their food from tiny algae growing under their skin. It is this algae which gives them their color.

• This animal-plant combination only works if there is enough light for the algae to grow, and feed its animal host.

• Benthic real estate is limited, and there is a slow-motion, but fierce competition for a place in the sun.

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Corals can grow right on top of another species!

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Some corals have the ability to extract nutrition from the overrun coral!

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To understand other coral weapons…..

• You should know a little anatomy of a coral polyp

• Make a labeled drawing of a polyp on your worksheet using the picture on this slide

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Corals have weapons!

• Some corals have sweeper tentacles

• Much longer than other ("normal") tentacles

• Capable of feeding, but used primarily as weapons

• The tips break off and stick to other corals when contacted

• After contact, they continue to discharge nematocysts, damaging the invader

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Nematocysts are “stinging cells”

• They exist in many corals and jellyfish

• They are tiny, coiled speargun-like structures that trigger at a touch

• They often deliver a toxic substance into any creature they contact

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Stinging Nematocysts:

• Are present on short tentacles for close range offense and defense.

• Can be fired long range, stinging any corals downstream but usually are triggered by close contact

• Normally result in the death of contacted tissue

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When a sweeper tentacle encounters a competing coral, it may attack the competing coral and literally "burn" the offending coral to the point of either killing it or severely damaging it.

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Another weapon corals use: Mesenterial filaments

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These filaments come from the stomach of a coral polyp

• They allow one polyp to kill or devour other coral polyps through a process similar to digestion

• Some corals even have the capacity to produce both sweeper tentacles and mesenterial filaments, enabling them to fight a battle on several fronts

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Corals can also “fight” with Extracoelenteric Digestion

• Corals expel digestive filaments which contain cnidocytes (digestive fluids)

• Cnidocytes can be expelled from the digestive track en masse (puking) onto a nearby coral, digesting it

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Yet another weapon of corals: mucus

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Mucus is an effective weapon!

It can:

• be toxic or contain nematocycts

• be carried long distances by water currents

• be quite damaging as it "sticks" to corals

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Corals may use chemical weapons!

• The production of toxic compounds is known as allelopathy

• Most commonly known producers of toxins are soft corals

• Effective in the aggressive competition for space on the reef – toxins can kill competitors

• They are also excellent defense against predation and parasitism.

Chemical Competition .

and gorgoneans. Toxins emitted by these corals can be lethal to fish.

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A few corals use movement to defend themselves and avoid the weapons of

other corals

• Some corals have the ability to move about on the reef.

• Some corals can detach from the bottom and settle in another location

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There is a price for doing battle on the reef: The energy spent on both offense and defense uses

precious resources that could otherwise be spent on growth and reproduction

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Try to explain the concept of benthic reef “turf wars”

Start by taking turns trying to explain it to a partner in class.

Next, write a paragraph explaining this concept as you would to someone who has not

seen this slide show.

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Acknowledgements

• Micheal Paletta, Author and Marine Biotechnology Consultant

• Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UC San Diego

• Photos by James Watt, Kevin Hahn, Dave Krupp and Sandy Webb