Pair formation in Spongicola japonica (Crustacea: Stenopodidea: Spongicolidae), a shrimp associated with deep-sea hexactinellid sponges

Author(s):  
Tomomi Saito ◽  
Itaru Uchida ◽  
Masatsune Takeda

The population structure of the deep-sea sponge-associated shrimp Spongicola japonica was investigated, and the mechanism of pair formation analysed from field samples. The composition pattern of shrimp in host sponges was divided into three patterns by sex and number as follows: solitary, a solitary inhabitant; sexually paired, a pair with a male and a female; grouped, multiple individuals excluding those designated as sexually paired. Juveniles usually remained grouped or solitary in a host cavity until the size at which gonadal maturity starts. Before forming sexual pairs, shrimp appear to have a free-living period outside the host, when the ovarian stages of females correspond to early to late vitellogenesis. Re-invasion is just before the first spawning, when females are in the ovarian stage of late vitellogenesis.

Biology ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. 522
Author(s):  
Régis Santos ◽  
Wendell Medeiros-Leal ◽  
Osman Crespo ◽  
Ana Novoa-Pabon ◽  
Mário Pinho

With the commercial fishery expansion to deeper waters, some vulnerable deep-sea species have been increasingly captured. To reduce the fishing impacts on these species, exploitation and management must be based on detailed and precise information about their biology. The common mora Mora moro has become the main deep-sea species caught by longliners in the Northeast Atlantic at depths between 600 and 1200 m. In the Azores, landings have more than doubled from the early 2000s to recent years. Despite its growing importance, its life history and population structure are poorly understood, and the current stock status has not been assessed. To better determine its distribution, biology, and long-term changes in abundance and size composition, this study analyzed a fishery-dependent and survey time series from the Azores. M. moro was found on mud and rock bottoms at depths below 300 m. A larger–deeper trend was observed, and females were larger and more abundant than males. The reproductive season took place from August to February. Abundance indices and mean sizes in the catch were marked by changes in fishing fleet operational behavior. M. moro is considered vulnerable to overfishing because it exhibits a long life span, a large size, slow growth, and a low natural mortality.


2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anatoliy L. Drozdov ◽  
Alexander A. Karpenko

The morphology, chemical composition, and optical properties of long monoaxonic spicules were studied in several species of marine deep-sea hexactinellid sponges of different orders and families: Asconema setubalense (Hexasterophora, Lyssacinosida) and Monorhaphis chuni Schulze (Monorhaphiidae). Their macrostructural organization is a system of thin layers laid around the central cylinder containing a square canal filled with organic matter. A significant role in spicule organization is played by the organic matrix. The macrostructural of organization of the spicule in Monorhaphis chuni is a system of the “cylinder-within-a-cylinder” type. However the spicule surface is covered with ridges. They penetrate a few layers into the spicule. Analysis of the elemental composition of the basalia spicule of Monorhaphis chuni demonstrates a heterogeneous allocation of C, O, Si on the spicule surface, subsurface layers, and on ridges. All studied spicules have the properties of anisotropic crystals and they demonstrate a capability to the birefrigence. On the other hand we discovered unique property of spicules—their capacity for triboluminescence. The discovery of triboluminescence in composite organosilicon materials of which the spicules of hexactinellid sponges are built may contribute to the creation of biomimetic materials capable of generating light emission.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manuel Maldonado ◽  
María López-Acosta ◽  
Kathrin Busch ◽  
Beate M. Slaby ◽  
Kristina Bayer ◽  
...  

Hexactinellid sponges are common in the deep sea, but their functional integration into those ecosystems remains poorly understood. The phylogenetically related species Schaudinnia rosea and Vazella pourtalesii were herein incubated for nitrogen and phosphorous, returning markedly different nutrient fluxes. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) revealed S. rosea to host a low abundance of extracellular microbes, while Vazella pourtalesii showed higher microbial abundance and hosted most microbes within bacteriosyncytia, a novel feature for Hexactinellida. Amplicon sequences of the microbiome corroborated large between-species differences, also between the sponges and the seawater of their habitats. Metagenome-assembled genome of the V. pourtalesii microbiota revealed genes coding for enzymes operating in nitrification, denitrification, dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium, nitrogen fixation, and ammonia/ammonium assimilation. In the nitrification and denitrification pathways some enzymes were missing, but alternative bridging routes allow the microbiota to close a N cycle in the holobiont. Interconnections between aerobic and anaerobic pathways may facilitate the sponges to withstand the low-oxygen conditions of deep-sea habitats. Importantly, various N pathways coupled to generate ammonium, which, through assimilation, fosters the growth of the sponge microbiota. TEM showed that the farmed microbiota is digested by the sponge cells, becoming an internal food source. This microbial farming demands more ammonium that can be provided internally by the host sponges and some 2.6 million kg of ammonium from the seawater become annually consumed by the aggregations of V. pourtalesii. Such ammonium removal is likely impairing the development of the free-living bacterioplankton and the survival chances of other sponge species that feed on bacterioplankton. Such nutritional competitive exclusion would favor the monospecific character of the V. pourtalesii aggregations. These aggregations also affect the surrounding environment through an annual release of 27.3 million kg of nitrite and, in smaller quantities, of nitrate and phosphate. The complex metabolic integration among the microbiota and the sponge suggests that the holobiont depends critically on the correct functioning of its N-driven microbial engine. The metabolic intertwining is so delicate that it changed after moving the sponges out of their habitat for a few days, a serious warning on the conservation needs of these sponge aggregations.


1986 ◽  
Vol 37 (5) ◽  
pp. 609 ◽  
Author(s):  
DM Alongi

Population structure and trophic composition of free-living nematodes from carbonate sands within different functional zones (reef crest, reef flat and lagoon) of Davies Reef in the Great Barrier Reef were examined. At the reef crest (station C) and at a shallow lagoon area unprotected by the back wall of the reef flat (station G), sediments were subjected to intense wave action and supported significantly (P < 0.05) lower mean nematode densities (<60 individuals per 10 cm2) than sands within the other reef zones (100-400 individuals per 10 cm2). Mean nematode densities and numerical species richness were highest (P < 0.05) in a shallow lagoon habitat protected from hydrodynamic- induced disturbances by the back wall of the reef flat (station H). Differences in population densities among the reef zones were not related to water depth or sediment granulometry. Species diversity was low within the reef, with only six species present in deep lagoon sands co-inhabited by actively bioturbating ghost shrimps (Callianassa spp.). Normal classification, nodal analysis and detrended correspondence analysis indicated that faunal groups were distinct among the different reefal zones. Very coarse to medium sands at the reef crest and across the reef flat were inhabited primarily by omnivorous and epistrate-feeding nematodes. Most nematodes within the very fine to fine sands of the lagoon were non-selective or selective deposit feeders. Nematode community structure from the reef crest to the shallow lagoon appears to be determined primarily by sediment granulometry as controlled by reef hydrodynamics, whereas in the deep lagoon nematode communities are negatively affected by the presence of thalassinid ghost shrimps.


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