Abstract

The Caribbean spiny lobster, Panulirus argus, is one of the most valuable fisheries commodities in the Central American region, directly employing 50,000 people and generating >US$450 million per year [1]. This industry is particularly important to small island states such as The Bahamas, which exports more lobster than any other country in the region [1]. Several factors contribute to this disproportionally high productivity, principally the extensive shallow-water banks covered in seagrass meadows [2], where fishermen deploy artificial shelters for the lobsters tosupplement scarce reef habitat [3]. The surrounding seabed communities are dominated by lucinid bivalve mollusks that live among the seagrass root system [4, 5]. These clams host chemoautotrophic bacterial symbionts in their gills that synthesize organic matter using reduced sulfur compounds, providing nutrition to their hosts [6]. Recent studies have highlighted the important role of the lucinid clam symbiosis in maintaining the health and productivity of seagrass ecosystems [7, 8], but their biomass also represents a potentially abundant, but as yet unquantified, food source to benthic predators [9]. Here we undertake the first analysis of Caribbean spiny lobster diet using a stable isotope approach (carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur) and show that a significant portion of their food (∼20% on average) is obtained from chemosynthetic primary production in the form of lucinid clams. This nutritional pathway was previously unrecognized in the spiny lobster's diet, and these results are the first empirical evidence that chemosynthetic primary production contributes to the productivity of commercial fisheries stocks.

Highlights

  • Spiny lobsters are foraging generalists in coral reef ecosystems that leave their dens at night to hunt over various habitats around the reef flats [10,11,12]

  • Previous studies of the spiny lobster diet have been limited to observational and gut content analyses, which have a number of known limitations [13]

  • Large shell middens were frequently observed at the entrance of artificial shelters in seagrass habitats, which mostly (>90%) consisted of shells from the lucinid bivalve, Codakia orbicularis (Figure 1A)

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Summary

Graphical Abstract

Most of the energetic input into food webs occurs through photosynthesis, but some marine animals get food from symbioses with chemosynthetic bacteria. Higgs et al show that chemosynthetic primary production from specialized clams in seagrass beds plays a significant role in supporting the economically valuable Caribbean spiny lobster fishery. Highlights d This is the first stable isotope analysis of the Caribbean spiny lobster diet d Spiny lobsters obtain 20% of their diet from chemosynthetic food sources d This is the first demonstration that chemosynthetic primary production supports fisheries d Seagrass habitats provide chemosynthesis-based ecosystem services. 2016, Current Biology 26, 3393–3398 December 19, 2016 a 2016 The Authors.

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