Ecological succession of the sponge cryptofauna in Hawaiian reefs add new insights to detritus production by pioneering species

Date

2022-09-05

Authors

Vincente, Jan
Timmers, Molly A.
Webb, Maryann K.
Bahr, Keisha D.
Jury, Christopher P.
Toonen, Robert J.

ORCID

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Abstract

Successional theory proposes that fast growing and well dispersed opportunistic species are the first to occupy available space. However, these pioneering species have relatively short life cycles and are eventually outcompeted by species that tend to be longer-lived and have lower dispersal capabilities. Using Autonomous Reef Monitoring Structures (ARMS) as standardized habitats, we examine the assembly and stages of ecological succession among sponge species with distinctive life history traits and physiologies found on cryptic coral reef habitats of Kāneʻohe Bay, Hawaiʻi. Sponge recruitment was monitored bimonthly over 2 years on ARMS deployed within a natural coral reef habitat resembling the surrounding climax community and on ARMS placed in unestablished mesocosms receiving unfiltered seawater directly from the natural reef deployment site. Fast growing haplosclerid and calcareous sponges initially recruited to and dominated the mesocosm ARMS. In contrast, only slow growing long-lived species initially recruited to the reef ARMS, suggesting that despite available space, the stage of ecological succession in the surrounding habitat influences sponge community development in uninhabited space. Sponge composition and diversity between early summer and winter months within mesocosm ARMS shifted significantly as the initially recruited short-lived calcareous and haplosclerid species initially recruit and then died off. The particulate organic carbon contribution of dead sponge tissue from this high degree of competition-free community turnover suggests a possible new component to the sponge loop hypothesis which remains to be tested among these pioneering species. This source of detritus could be significant in early community development of young coastal habitats but less so on established coral reefs where the community is dominated by long-lived colonial sponges.

Description

Keywords

reefs, hawaii, ecology, cryptofauna

Sponsorship

Funding was provided by an NSF Postdoctoral Research Fellowship in Biology (#1612307), NSF awards OA#1416889 & OCE# 2048457, and by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Ocean Acidification Program (#60046834). This is HIMB 1902 contribution number. We thank Katherine Van Artsdalen and Emma Orndahl for helping with sponge barcoding and ImageJ analysis.

Rights:

Attribution 4.0 International

Citation

Vicente, J., Timmers, M.A., Webb, M.K. et al. Ecological succession of the sponge cryptofauna in Hawaiian reefs add new insights to detritus production by pioneering species. Sci Rep 12, 15093 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-18856-8