In situ observations on withdrawal behaviour of the sea pen Virgularia mirabilis

Archive ouverte

Ambroso, Stefano | Dominguez-Carrió, Carlos | Grinyó, Jordi | López-González, Pablo | Gili, Josep-Maria | Purroy, Ariadna | Requena, Susana | Madurell, Teresa

Edité par CCSD ; Springer Verlag -

International audience. Sessile marine organisms respond to environmental disturbance and predation by means of different adaptive strategies. Sea pens (Octocorallia, Pennatulacea) are colonial cnidarians adapted to survive on the muddy and sandy bottoms of the continental shelf and slope. Some of them can withdraw partially or completely into the sediment on an apparent rhythmic but unsynchronized procedure (Langton et al. 1990). Withdrawal into the sand or mud by sea pens tend to be preceded by the closure of the polyps and the expulsion of the water contained within the colony (Hoare and Wilson 1977). Only a few contractions are generally sufficient for the animal to hide into the mud and some colonies can withdraw into the sediment within few seconds if disturbed.The reasons for such withdrawal and extension behaviour of sea pens are not well understood, and the existing information is equivocal. Hoare and Wilson (1977) described a possible tidal-based rhythm for Virgularia mirabilis while Wilson (1975), using time-lapse photography, found a 22- to 27-h rhythm for this species that was independent of lighting and tidal regime. Anyhow, there is a lack of in situ observations to provide evidence for this type of behaviour in the field. Here, observations are presented for the first time on the withdrawal behaviour of Virgularia mirabilis (for identification, see Greathead et al. 2007). They were made at ca 100 m depth by means of a Remotely Operated Vehicle (ROV) in the mobile bottoms of the continental shelf, showing that this species retracts smoothly and with the polyps fully expanded.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Megabenthic assemblages in the continental shelf edge and upper slope of the Menorca Channel, Western Mediterranean Sea

Archive ouverte | Grinyó, Jordi | CCSD

International audience. Highly diverse megabenthic assemblages dominated by passive and active suspension feeders have been recently reported in shelf edge environments of the Mediterranean Sea. Due to their frequen...

Diversity, distribution and population size structure of deep Mediterranean gorgonian assemblages (Menorca Channel, Western Mediterranean Sea). Diversité, distribution et structure de la taille des populations des assemblages de gorgones profondes en Méditerranée (canal de Minorque, mer Méditerranée occidentale)

Archive ouverte | Grinyó, Jordi | CCSD

International audience. Gorgonians are a key group of organisms in benthic marine communities with a wide bathymetric and geographical distribution. Although their presence on continental shelves and slopes has been...

20 Gorgonian and Black Coral Assemblages in Deep Coastal Bottoms and Continental Shelves of the Mediterranean Sea

Archive ouverte | Gori, Andrea | CCSD

International audience. Coral gardens are increasingly being reported at 40–200 m depth in the Mediterranean Sea. These coral assemblages are composed of gorgonians from shallow coastal rocky bottoms extending their...

Chargement des enrichissements...