Abstract

Abstract Oxygen uptake rates were measured in fasted and fed Platorchestia platensis (Krøyer, 1845) to estimate the energy required for ingestion, digestion, absorption, assimilation and growth. A modified population specific dynamic action model (SDApop) was compared between two populations fed either wrack or driftwood. Results reject the null hypothesis: that both populations have equal energy requirements during digestion, as might be the case if native enzymes alone were involved. The alternate hypothesis that driftwood-fed P. platensis have a significantly lower SDA than wrack-fed ones was supported. Our oxygen uptake measurement experiments could not distinguish between two possible causes of the lower energetic costs associated with driftwood-fed P. platensis: driftwood as a poor-quality food and/or a microbial subsidy effect. Preliminary microbiological studies of P. platensis do support the subsidy effect, because cellulose-degrading bacteria and filamentous fungi were present in whole body tissues from the animal. Wrack and driftwood culture treatments of P. platensis supported a different cellulose-degrading microbiome between the two treatments.

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