Abstract

The recently described epizoic sponge-sponge symbioses between Xestospongia deweerdtae and two species of Plakortis present an unusual series of sponge interactions. Sponges from the genus Plakortis are fierce allelopathic competitors, rich in cytotoxic secondary metabolites, and yet X. deweerdtae flourishes as an epizoic encrustation on Plakortis deweerdtaephila and Plakortis symbiotica. Our objective in this study was to evaluate the hypothesis that X. deweerdtae grows epizoic to these two species of Plakortis due to a shared chemical defense against predators. We collected free-living individuals of X. deweerdtae and symbiotic pairs from a wide geographical range to generate crude organic extracts and a series of polarity fractions from sponge extract. We tested the deterrency of these extracts against three common coral reef predators: the bluehead wrasse, Thalassoma bifasciatum, the Caribbean sharpnose puffer, Canthigaster rostrata, and the white spotwrist hermit crab, Pagurus criniticornis. While the chemical defenses of P. deweerdtaephila and P. symbiotica are more potent than those of X. deweerdtae, all of the sponge species we tested significantly deterred feeding in all three generalist predators. The free-living form of X. deweerdtae is mostly defended across the region, with a few exceptions. The associated form of X. deweerdtae is always defended, and both species of Plakortis are very strongly defended, with puffers refusing to consume extract-treated pellets until the extract was diluted to 1/256× concentration. Using diode-array high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) coupled with high-resolution mass spectrometry (LC-MS/IT-TOF), we found two secondary metabolites from P. deweerdtaephila, probably the cyclic endoperoxides plakinic acid I and plakinic acid K, in low concentrations in the associated—but not the free-living—form of X. deweerdtae, suggesting a possible translocation of defensive chemicals from the basibiont to the epibiont. Comparing the immense deterrency of Plakortis spp. extracts to the extracts of X. deweerdtae gives the impression that there may be some sharing of chemical defenses: one partner in the symbiosis is clearly more defended than the other and a small amount of its defensive chemistry may translocate to the partner. However, X. deweerdtae effectively deters predators with its own defensive chemistry. Multiple lines of evidence provide no support for the shared chemical defense hypothesis. Given the diversity of other potential food resources available to predators on coral reefs, it is improbable that the evolution of these specialized sponge-sponge symbioses has been driven by predation pressure.

Highlights

  • Sponges interact with neighboring benthic organisms in a wide diversity of ways, ranging from mutually beneficial to mutually antagonistic interactions

  • For free living individuals of X. deweerdtae, the mean number of treated food pellets eaten by both fish species from each of the 9 collection sites was significantly less than controls, with three exceptions: Acklins Island (μ = 6.67/10) and Bocas del Toro (μ = 9.67/10) for puffers, and Desecheo (μ = 7/10) for wrasse (Fig 1)

  • We evaluated the hypothesis that Xestospongia deweerdtae grows in specialized sponge-sponge symbioses with either Plakortis deweerdtaephila or Plakortis symbiotica due to a shared chemical defense against predators

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Summary

Introduction

Sponges interact with neighboring benthic organisms in a wide diversity of ways, ranging from mutually beneficial to mutually antagonistic interactions (reviewed by Wulff [1]). Many studies have explored these interactions, documenting cases of allelopathic competition [2,3,4], collaborative mutualism [5,6], and varying degrees of proximal association [7,8,9]. Epizoism, involves one organism (the epibiont) growing on top of another (the basibiont) without the antagonistic interaction of smothering. There are many reports of epizoic sponge associations, the causes and consequences of the associations are not always explored (e.g. [14,15,16,17])

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