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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Marine chemical ecology: chemical signals and cues structure marine populations, communities, and ecosystems.

Mark E. Hay
- 25 Mar 2009 - 
- Vol. 1, Iss: 1, pp 193-212
TLDR
How chemical cues regulate critical aspects of the behavior of marine organisms from bacteria to phytoplankton to benthic invertebrates and water column fishes is reviewed.
Abstract
Chemical cues constitute much of the language of life in the sea. Our understanding of biotic interactions and their effects on marine ecosystems will advance more rapidly if this language is studied and understood. Here, I review how chemical cues regulate critical aspects of the behavior of marine organisms from bacteria to phytoplankton to benthic invertebrates and water column fishes. These chemically mediated interactions strongly affect population structure, community organization, and ecosystem function. Chemical cues determine foraging strategies, feeding choices, commensal associations, selection of mates and habitats, competitive interactions, and transfer of energy and nutrients within and among ecosystems. In numerous cases, the indirect effects of chemical signals on behavior have as much or more effect on community structure and function as the direct effects of consumers and pathogens. Chemical cues are critical for understanding marine systems, but their omnipresence and impact are inadequ...

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Citations
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Microbial Community Changes Elicited by Exposure to Cyanobacterial Allelochemicals

TL;DR: A role for cyanobacterial allelochemicals in the structuring of aquatic microbial communities is supported, highlighting the fine-scale dynamics elicited by the exudates of cyanobacteria.
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Grazing-induced production of DMS can stabilize food-web dynamics and promote the formation of phytoplankton blooms in a multitrophic plankton model

TL;DR: A model of the interactions between three trophic levels of plankton is considered, showing that the inclusion of a grazing-induced DMS production term has a stabilizing effect on the system dynamics under the assumption that DMS acts as an info-chemical and increases the rate of mesozooplankton predation on grazing microzooplankton.
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Marine-Based Cultivation of Diacarnus Sponges and the Bacterial Community Composition of Wild and Maricultured Sponges and Their Larvae

TL;DR: This long-term experiment suggests that D. erythraenus probably remained healthy and indicates its mariculture suitability, and the DGGE profiles of wild and maricultured sponges differed only slightly, without a significant effect of depths or dates of sampling.
Journal ArticleDOI

Terpene Biosynthesis in Red Algae Is Catalyzed by Microbial Type But Not Typical Plant Terpene Synthases

TL;DR: This study indicates that the formation of terpene carbon skeletons in red algae is carried out by MTPSLs that are phylogenetically unrelated to typical plant terPene synthases and most likely originated in Rhodophyta via horizontal gene transfer from bacteria.
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Antimicrobial activity of bacteria from marine sponge Suberea mollis and bioactive metabolites of Vibrio sp. EA348.

TL;DR: Production of antimicrobial metabolites and hydrolysates in these bacteria suggest their potential role in sponge against pathogens, highlighting the importance of marine bacteria inhabiting sponges as potential source of antimacterial compounds and plant growth hormones of pharmaceutical and agricultural significance.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Centuries of Human-Driven Change in Salt Marsh Ecosystems

TL;DR: It is concluded that the best way to protect salt marshes and the services they provide is through the integrated approach of ecosystem-based management.
Journal ArticleDOI

Marine Plant-Herbivore Interactions: The Ecology of Chemical Defense

TL;DR: Although numerous seaweed characteristics can deter some herbivores, the effects of morphology and chemistry have been studied most thoroughly and these types of seaweeds may be considered herbivore tolerant.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evidence that halogenated furanones from Delisea pulchra inhibit acylated homoserine lactone (AHL)-mediated gene expression by displacing the AHL signal from its receptor protein.

TL;DR: The contention that furanones, at the concentrations produced by the alga, can control bacterial colonization of surfaces by specifically interfering with AHL-mediated gene expression at the level of the LuxR protein is supported.
Journal ArticleDOI

Marine chemical ecology: what's known and what's next?

TL;DR: This review concludes that relatively unstudied, ontogenetic shifts in concentrations and types of defenses occur in marine species, and patterns of larval chemical defenses appear to provide insights into the evolution of complex life cycles and of differing modes of development among marine invertebrates.
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