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Journal ArticleDOI

Physiological energetics of the intertidal sea anemone Anthopleura elegantissima. I: Prey capture, absorption efficiency and growth

W. E. Zamer
- 01 Aug 1986 - 
- Vol. 92, Iss: 3, pp 299-314
TLDR
Higher growth rates in H anemones, which are supported by higher prey-capture rates, result in attainment of minimum body size for reproduction in a relatively short period of time despite reduction in time available for feeding, thus improving relative fitness of theseAnemones in the upper intertidal zone.
Abstract
Energy budgets were calculated for individuals of the sea anemone Anthopleura elegantissima (Brandt), collected in 1981 and 1982 from Bodega Harbor, California, USA. Rates of ammonium excretion were measured in high-and low-intertidal, symbiotic and aposymbiotic sea anemones within 24 h of collection. Among symbiotic and aposymbiotic individuals, no differences in excretion rate were found on the basis of intertidal height. However, rates of ammonium excretion in aposymbiotic anemones (2.14 μmol NH + 4 g-1 h-1) were significantly higher than in symbiotic ones (0.288 μmol NH + 4 g-1 h-1). Rates of excretion were used with estimated rates of oxygen uptake to calculate nitrogen quotients (NQ). NQ and RQ values from the literature were used to calculate an oxyenthalpic equivalent [501 kJ (mol O2)-1 for R+U], and mass proportions of protein (54%), carbohydrate (44%) and lipid (2%) catabolized during routine metabolism in this species 24 h after feeding. Integrated energy budgets of these experimental anemones were calculated from data on ingestion, absorption and growth, and estimates of translocated energy from the symbiotic algae. Contribution of zooxanthellae to animal respiration based on translocation=90% and RQ=0.97 are 41 and 79% in high-and low-intertidal anemones, respectively. Calculated scope for growth is greater than directly measured growth in both high-and low-intertidal individuals. The deficit, estimated as 30% of assimilated energy in high-intertidal anemones, is attributed to unmeasured costs (specific dynamic effect) or production (mucus). Low-intertidal anemones lost mass during the experiment, implying that the magnitude of the deficit was greater in these anemones than in upper intertidal individuals. Anemones from both shore levels lost zooxanthellae during the experiment, which contributed to energy loss since the contribution of the zooxanthellae is greater in low-intertidal anemones. Scope for growth is preserved in high-intertidal anemones (29% of assimilated energy) because metabolic demands are lower due to aerial exposure, and prey capture rate is higher compared to lowshore anemones. Although possibly underestimated, lower scope for growth in low-shore anemones may result from continuous feeding and digestion processes that are less efficient than those of periodically feeding high-intertidal anemones.

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Shifting roles of heterotrophy and autotrophy in coral energetics under varying turbidity.

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Coral suspension feeding on fine particulate matter

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Energetics approach to predicting mortality risk from environmental stress: a case study of coral bleaching

TL;DR: A model that links the functional response of colony energy balance and energy store dynamics to coral mortality risk and recovery during and following bleaching events is developed and indicates that energy-costly disturbances and low availability of food work to increase bleaching-induced Coral mortality risk for acroporid corals on Indo-Pacific reefs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Temperate and tropical algal-sea anemone symbioses

TL;DR: Comparison of the nature of symbiosis between sea anemones and zooxanthellae in both regions to test tropical paradigms against temperate examples and to identify directions for future research indicates the need for more investigations of other temperate and tropical symbiotic anemone species.
References
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Book

Biometry: The Principles and Practice of Statistics in Biological Research

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a model for the analysis of variance in a single-classification and two-way and multiway analysis of Variance with the assumption of correlation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reef Corals: Mutualistic Symbioses Adapted to Nutrient-Poor Environments

Leonard Muscatine, +1 more
- 01 Jul 1977 - 
TL;DR: The present discussion considers the potential nutritional capabilities of corals as mutualistic symbioses and the extent to which specific organismic and ecological manifestations of these capabilities have been described and quantified.
Journal ArticleDOI

Estimating the daily contribution of carbon from zooxanthellae to coral animal respiration1

TL;DR: An equation is derived which rigorously defines the photosynthesis: respiration ratio (P:R) for any alga: invertebrate symbiotic association arid and permits the computation of the fractional contribution of translocated algal carbon to the daily respiratory carbon requirement of the host animal.
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