FEEDING AND PREY CAPTURE CYCLES IN THE APOSYMBIONTIC GORGONIAN PARAMURICEA-CLAVATA

Citation
R. Coma et al., FEEDING AND PREY CAPTURE CYCLES IN THE APOSYMBIONTIC GORGONIAN PARAMURICEA-CLAVATA, Marine ecology. Progress series, 115(3), 1994, pp. 257-270
Citations number
67
Categorie Soggetti
Marine & Freshwater Biology",Ecology
ISSN journal
01718630
Volume
115
Issue
3
Year of publication
1994
Pages
257 - 270
Database
ISI
SICI code
0171-8630(1994)115:3<257:FAPCCI>2.0.ZU;2-N
Abstract
A study of the stomach contents of a population of the Mediterranean g orgonian Paramuricea clavata (Risso, 1826) showed that zooplankton acc ounted for an important share of the diet. Nauplii, copepod eggs, othe r invertebrate eggs, and other small (100 to 200 mu m) prey items of l ow motility accounted for 78 % of prey items, though adult calanoid co pepods (600 to 700 mu m) were also captured. The mean number of prey i tems per polyp ranged from 1.2 to 3.3. The prey capture rate was highl y dependent upon the density and frequency of occurrence of planktonic prey in the habitat. Peak prey capture levels were recorded in spring and at the end of autumn, while prey capture rates fell off substanti ally in summer, when the proportion of colonies with contracted polyps was very high. There were significant differences in the prey capture rates between colonies, which was attributed to differences in the sp atial distribution of the zooplankton. There were also large differenc es in prey capture rates within the same colony. Polyps located on the apical and peripheral branches captured twice as many prey as those l ocated in the centre or at the base of the colony. It was estimated th at the population, located off the Medes Islands (northwestern Mediter ranean) at between 17 and 29 m depth with a mean density of 32 gorgoni ans m(-2), may capture between 1.52 x 10(5) and 1.06 x 10(6) prey item s m(-2) d(-1), according to the time of year. The prey capture rates r ecorded during a diel cycle, when extrapolated to an annual cycle, sug gest that gorgonians play an important role in littoral food webs and particularly in the flow of energy from the plankton to the benthos.