頁籤選單縮合
題名 | Diverse Interactions between Corals and the Coral-Killing Sponge, Terpios hoshinota (Suberitidae: Hadromerida)= |
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作者 | Wang, Jih-terng; Chen, Yi-yun; Meng, Pei-jie; Sune, Yu-hsuan; Hsu, Chia-min; Wei, Kuo-yen; Chen, Allen Chaolun; |
期刊 | Zoological Studies |
出版日期 | 20120300 |
卷期 | 51:2 2012.03[民101.03] |
頁次 | 頁150-159 |
分類號 | 386.394 |
語文 | eng |
關鍵詞 | Terpios; Cyanobacteria; Coral-killing sponge; Substrata competition; |
英文摘要 | Terpios hoshinota is an encrusting sponge which can kill corals by overgrowing them. However, little is known about interactions between sponges and corals. Using visual observations and scanning electron microscopy (SEM), 4 features, including hairy tips, thick tissue threads, compact edges, and disintegrated tissues, displayed at the coral-facing front of Terpios were summarized from examining 20 species of corals. Hairy tips, found on 13 species of coral victims, were occupied by cyanobacteria, sponge tissues, and spicules. Thick tissue threads, found on only 7 coral species, were obviously an extension of Terpios tissues. Twelve coral species displayed a compact edge at the Terpioscoral border, in which some Terpios fronts had extruding spicules. Disintegrated tissue was only found on the coral side in 5 species of coral, but that on the sponge side was only found on 1 coral species. Only a few disintegrated tissues being found at the Terpios-coral border suggests that allelochemicals are not the major player in Terpios-coral interactions. The interactions also did not display species specificity, except in the case of Terpios having been retrogressively grown over by a coral, which was only found in Millepora exaesa. Under SEM examination, coral nematocysts were usually found on the surface of the invading Terpios, but they did not seem to retard the growth of the sponge. In summary, exploitation of the substratum by T. hoshinota on coral does not move forward in a consistent manner. The performance of Terpios, such as when overgrowing a coral, building a clear border, or being retrogressively overgrown by a coral, may rely on the viability status of both organisms. |
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