Vol. 49 Núm. 1 (2020)
Articulos de investigación

Long-term coral colonization by an excavating Caribbean sponge mediated by heavy surge

Ángela Marulanda-Gómez
GEOMAR Helmholtz-Zentrum für Ozeanforschung Kiel
Mateo López-Victoria
Pontificia Universidad Javeriana Cali
Sven Zea
Instituto de Estudios en Ciencias del Mar (Cecimar), Universidad Nacional de Colombia, sede Caribe

Publicado 2020-07-16

Versiones

Palabras clave

  • Cliona tenuis,
  • Acropora palmata,
  • Coral colonization,
  • Bioerosion,
  • Storms

Cómo citar

1.
Marulanda-Gómez Ángela, López-Victoria M, Zea S. Long-term coral colonization by an excavating Caribbean sponge mediated by heavy surge. Bol. Investig. Mar. Costeras [Internet]. 16 de julio de 2020 [citado 22 de diciembre de 2024];49(1):101-12. Disponible en: https://boletin.invemar.org.co/ojs/index.php/boletin/article/view/906

Resumen

Dead Acropora palmata branches colonized by the excavating sponge Cliona tenuis are prone to dislodgement, breakage, and translocation during heavy surge from storms or hurricanes, favoring the dispersion of this sponge. At Islas del Rosario (Colombia, Caribbean), adult C. tenuis carried by A. palmata fragments that fell onto live massive corals were able to colonize the new coral, subsequently killing live tissue of the newly infected coral. Corals that recruited onto fallen A. palmata branches overgrown with adult C. tenuis were also invaded once the sponge reached their base. To determine if the incidence of this phenomenon has increased since 2002 when it was first documented, the prevalence and mode of colonization of corals by adult C. tenuis was again quantified in 2014 on the same reef. Although a trend is difficult to infer from two surveys, the number of coral colonies colonized by C. tenuis doubled by 2014, and new cases of colonization from sponge-carrying A. palmata branches were found. However, the frequency of colonization by adult sponges from A. palmata branches in 2014 was one-half to one-fifth lower than in 2002, demonstrating that other forms of colonization onto massive corals may be increasing, or that storms erase the evidence of adult colonization by translocating vector coral branches, as was observed in one longitudinally-monitored case of transmission. As time passes and the fragmentation and erosion of the reef increases, the evidence of colonization of stony corals by C. tenuis through A. palmata branches vanishes.

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Citas

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