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Ecol Evol
2023 May 18;135:e10096. doi: 10.1002/ece3.10096.
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Opportunistic consumption of coral spawn by the ruby brittle star (Ophioderma rubicundum).
Williamson OM
,
Mustard AT
,
Bright AJ
,
Williams DE
,
Ladd MC
,
Baker AC
.
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Many reef invertebrates reproduce through simultaneous broadcast spawning, with an apparent advantage of overwhelming potential predators and maximizing propagule survival. Although reef fish have been observed to consume coral gamete bundles during spawning events, there are few records of such predation by benthic invertebrates. Here, we document several instances of the ruby brittle star, Ophioderma rubicundum, capturing and consuming egg-sperm bundles of the mountainous star coral, Orbicella faveolata, and the symmetrical brain coral, Pseudodiploria strigosa, during spawning events in the Cayman Islands in 2012 and the Florida Keys in 2022. These observations are widely separated in space and time (>600 km, 10 years), suggesting that this behavior may be prevalent on western Atlantic reefs. Since O. rubicundum spawns on the same or subsequent nights as these coral species, we hypothesize that this opportunistic feeding behavior takes advantage of lipid-rich coral gamete bundles to recover energy reserves expended by the brittle star during gametogenesis. The consumption of coral gametes by adult brittle stars suggests an underexplored trophic link between reef invertebrates and also provides evidence that ophiuroid-coral symbioses may oscillate between commensalism and parasitism depending on the ontogeny and reproductive status of both animals. Our observations provide insights into the nuanced, dynamic associations between coral reef invertebrates and may have implications for coral reproductive success and resilience.
FIGURE 1. Adult Ophioderma rubicundum climbing atop spawning scleractinian corals in Half Moon Bay, East End, Grand Cayman on 6th September 2012. (a) An adult O. rubicundum waits on the surface of an Orbicella faveolata colony as it stages gamete bundles in the mouths of each polyp, preparing to spawn. (b,c) Four O. rubicundum feed on Pseudodiploria strigosa gamete bundles as they are released, coiling an arm around the prey before passing it to the mouth.
FIGURE 2. Screenshot from video footage depicting Ophioderma rubicundum (circled in white) emerging from its crevice within an Orbicella faveolata colony as the coral begins to spawn off Key Largo, FL in August 2022. Arm‐waving behavior from O. rubicundum can be seen as parts of the coral has released gamete bundles, while polyps in the area near the brittle star are still “staging” gamete bundles for release.
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