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Copepods of the genus Asterocheres (Copepoda: Siphonostomatoida) feeding on sponges: behavioral and ecological traits
Author(s) -
Mariani Simone,
Uriz MariaJ.
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
invertebrate biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.486
H-Index - 42
eISSN - 1744-7410
pISSN - 1077-8306
DOI - 10.1111/j.1744-7410.2001.tb00037.x
Subject(s) - copepod , biology , sponge , biomass (ecology) , abundance (ecology) , genus , ecology , zoology , crustacean , botany
. Four copepod species of the genus Asterocheres (A. echinicola, A. latus, A. suberitis and A. complexus ) are recorded for the first time as associated with Mediterranean sponges of the classes Calcarea and Demospongiae (orders Dictyoceratida, Dendroceratida, and Poecilosclerida). Individuals of A. suberitis are described for the first time as inhabiting sponges other than Suberites domuncula . The copepods seemed to use their trunk to suck the material (cuticles or excreted cells) produced at the sponge periphery (ectosome), which indicates that their feeding habits are similar to those observed in species of the same genus that feed on exfoliated tissues of echinoderms. In the laboratory, copepods fed on young sponges (rhagons) of the species Crambe crambe, Cacospongia mollior , and Dysidea avara without reducing the rhagon biomass. In contrast, rhagons of the species Haliclona sp., Hymedesmia spp., and Phorbas tenacior were consumed and their biomass reduced. This may be because the latter group does not produce external proteinaceous material. Copepod offspring were continuously released (∼6 nauplii every 48 h) and the larval stages were capable of limited swimming. We found significantly more copepods over the surface of the sponges than inside them. Copepod abundance was positively correlated with the sponge surface area while not with the sponge biomass. These results indicate that the copepods live preferentially over the sponge surface and that their abundance is surface‐area dependent. The behavioral traits described here indicate that the interactions between asterocherid species and sponges are worthy of future study.

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