1. Protocooperation among small polyps allows the coral Astroides calycularis to prey on large jellyfish
- Author
-
Luigi Musco, Fabio Badalamenti, Erik Caroselli, John Murray Roberts, Tomás Vega Fernández, Musco L, Vega Fernández T, Caroselli E, Roberts JM, Badalamenti F, Musco, L., Vega Fernandez, T., Caroselli, E., Roberts, J. M., Badalamenti, F., Musco, Luigi, Vega Fernández, Tomá, Caroselli, Erik, Roberts, John Murray, and Badalamenti, Fabio
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Astroides calycularis ,Jellyfish ,food.ingredient ,Protocooperation ,Ecology (disciplines) ,Coral ,ved/biology.organism_classification_rank.species ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Predation ,food ,biology.animal ,Animals ,14. Life underwater ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,biology ,ved/biology ,Ecology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,General Medicine ,Anthozoa ,protocooperation, scleractinian, jellyfish, predation ,0503 education - Abstract
The coral Astroides calycularis (Scleractinia: Dendrophylliidae) is endemic to the Mediterranean Sea (Terrón‐Sigler et al. 2016), where it can be reef forming (Musco et al. 2017: Fig. 1). In shallow water, it may cover up to 90% of rocky substrate from the surface down to 15 m depth where it is found in caves and on vertical walls. Astroides calycularis colonies frequently occur in dense aggregations (Goffredo et al. 2011), possibly favored by limited dispersion ability of both sexual (Goffredo et al. 2010) and asexual propagules (Serrano et al. 2017). High water movement promotes massive colony shapes with closely connected polyps usually forming continuous orange surfaces, leaving little space for the settlement of other benthic organisms (Casado‐Amezua et al. 2013). Astroides calycularis is “polystomatous,” forming small colonies composed of polyps connected to each other as a single organism bearing several mouths. Colony morphology is also strongly controlled by food availability (Goffredo et al. 2011). Polyps are typically 4–5 mm in length but larger polyps can grow up to 8 mm long. Like other azooxanthellate corals, A. calycularis is an obligate suspension feeder (Cebrian and Ballesteros 2004) and it is assumed to feed primarily on zooplankton transported by water movement, although the identity of its most preferred prey is unknown.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF