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Variable effects of symbiotic snapping shrimps on their sponge hosts

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Abstract

Mutualistic relationships are ubiquitous in tropical coral reefs, but the costs and benefits to partner species are often poorly known. In Caribbean coral reefs, several species of snapping shrimp (Synalpheus spp.) dwell exclusively in marine sponges, which serve as both habitat and food source. A paired experimental design was used to examine the effects of Synalpheus occupancy on predation, morphology, and growth of their sponge host Lissodendoryx colombiensis in Bocas del Toro, Panama (9.351°N, 82.258°W) in June 2009. Shrimp occupancy significantly decreased consumption of sponges by a predatory sea star (Oreaster reticulatus) and also affected sponge morphology; sponges grown without shrimps decreased in canal size, in both the laboratory and the field. Shrimp occupancy had more ambiguous effects on sponge growth. In laboratory experiments, shrimp occupancy benefited sponge growth, although all sponges experienced overall decreases in mass. In field experiments, there were no significant differences in growth between occupied and empty sponges. However, the benefits of shrimp occupancy on sponge growth were negatively correlated with overall increases in sponge size; sponges that decreased in mass during the experiment benefited more from shrimp occupancy than sponges that increased in mass. These costs and benefits suggest that Synalpheus has variable effects on sponges: positive effects on sponges in the presence of predators, and/or when sponges are decreasing in mass (e.g., during periods of physical stress), but a negative effect on sponges during periods of active sponge growth.

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Acknowledgments

The Smithsonian Marine Science Network provided funding for this study. This study could not have been completed without the patience and help of the staff at the Smithsonian’s Bocas del Toro marine station and the advice and help of J. Emmett Duffy. This study was greatly improved by advice from J. Pawlik, M.E. Hay, and J. Wulff. M. McGrew and C. Freeman provided invaluable assistance in the field. This manuscript was also greatly improved by the comments of Martin Thiel, Tripp Macdonald, and several anonymous reviewers. All experiments and collections were conducted in compliance with the current laws of Panama.

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Correspondence to Kristin M. Hultgren.

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Communicated by P. Kraufvelin.

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Hultgren, K.M. Variable effects of symbiotic snapping shrimps on their sponge hosts. Mar Biol 161, 1217–1227 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00227-014-2412-z

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00227-014-2412-z

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