Microheterotrophy in the zooxanthellate coral Stylophora pistillata: Effects of light and ciliate density

Type : ACL
Nature : Production scientifique
Au bénéfice du Laboratoire : Oui
Statut de publication : Publié
Année de publication : 1998
Auteurs (5) : FERRIER-PAGÈS Christine ALLEMAND Denis GATTUSO Jean-pierre JAUBERT J RASSOULZADEGAN Fereidoun
Revue scientifique : Limnology And Oceanography
Volume : 43
Fascicule : 7
Pages : 1639-1648
DOI : 10.4319/lo.1998.43.7.1639
URL : -
Abstract : We examined the ability of the zooxanthellate coral Stylophora
pistillata (Esper, 1797) to feed on microheterotrophs (bacteria and
oligotrichous ciliates). The effect of light on the feeding rates was
also investigated. Grazing experiments were first conducted by exposing
coral colonies to known amounts of H-3-thymidine-labeled bacteria and
ciliates and measuring the appearance of radioactivity in coral tissues.
A method was developed to obtain clean cultures of H-3-labeled ciliates.
Results showed that 7\% of the labeled bacteria and 90\% of the labeled
ciliates were ingested after 4-6 h incubation. Corals were then
incubated in medium containing different concentrations of unlabeled
ciliates (200, 500, 800 cells ml(-1)). Replicates of each concentration
were exposed to one of three light levels (0, 80, 250 mu mol m(-2)
s(-1)). Coral feeding rate increased with prey density, from 1.40 to
4.10 x 10(4) ciliates (0.22-0.65 mu g C mg protein(-1) h(-1)) for
200-800 ciliates ml(-1), respectively. However, a plateau was observed
after a total ingestion of 4 x 10(4) ciliates (1.7 mu gC mg
protein(-1)). The total number of ciliates ingested, as well as the
ingestion rates decreased when the light intensity increased. During
dark experiments, the maximal amount of carbon ingested was twice as
much as that ingested in light experiments. However, heterotrophic
nutrition occurred even if the colonies could satisfy their carbon
metabolism via photosynthesis. Zooplankton feeding seems therefore to
complement autotrophic nutrition. Under high Light, the small amount of
microplankton ingested may provide nitrogen, phosphorus, or vitamins to
corals, and this food supply may be especially important in tropical
waters where inorganic nutrient concentrations are low. Conversely, when
light is Limiting, predation may also provide most of the energy
necessary for coral maintenance.
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Citation :
Ferrier-Pagès C, Allemand D, Gattuso J-P, Jaubert J, Rassoulzadegan F (1998) Microheterotrophy in the zooxanthellate coral Stylophora pistillata: Effects of light and ciliate density. Limnol Oceanogr 43: 1639-1648 | doi: 10.4319/lo.1998.43.7.1639