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TRIBULATIONS FOR SYMBIOSIS IN CORAL REEFS AND THE POTOMAC RIVER VALLEY Julia Welch What do the coral reefs and PRV have in common? - Both have organisms that participate in some sort of symbiosis. - Both are being changed by anthropocentric activities. - Both have seen a decline in overall health in the past few decades especially. Examples of Symbiosis in Coral Reefs…. The red snapping shrimp and the ringed anenome are one example of mutualism. http://www.cs.brown.edu/~twd/fish/St.Vincent/pages/Red%20Snap ping%20Shrimp%202.htm http://www.meerwasserlexikon.de/tiere/1020_Bartholomea_annulata.htm “With fronds like these, who needs anenomes?” - Marlin the clownfish What will happen to NEMO?!?! Actually the clownfish do need the anenomes! (Remember the jellyfish race in the movie….) Anenomes will benefit from the clownfish because the clownfish will bring back scraps and possibly lure larger prey to the anenome where it will be stung. The anenome on the other hand will protect the clownfish, which develops a mucus to prevent it from being stung by the anenome. Mutualism at its finest Corals on the other hand are reliant on dinoflagellates in the genus Symbiodinum otherwise known as zooanthellae. These zooanthellae need the corals to protect them and also for compounds they need for photosynthesis. “In return, the algae produce oxygen and help the coral to remove wastes. Most importantly, zooxanthellae supply the coral with glucose, glycerol, and amino acids, which are the products of photosynthesis. The coral uses these products to make proteins, fats, and carbohydrates, and produce calcium carbonate” – (NOAA, 2010). Look at all the pretty colors!!!! So where is the problem? When corals become physically stressed they will expel the zooanthellae from their polyps and the coral will become a bleached white. If the coral does not become a host for zooanthellae for a long period it will die. Anthropocentric effects on coral reefs? Pollution – nutrient runoff from the mainland can increase nutrients in the water and cause algal blooms that cover and destroy the corals. Pesticides, oil, and sediment can also be included in runoff from the mainland. Detrimental fishing techniques – cyanide fishing, blast fishing, deep water trawling Harvesting of coral for jewelry and human use Ships that become grounded Oil spills during coral spawning. Example of symbiosis in PRV…. Sea nettles and oyster spat. Sea nettles (Chrysaora auinquecirrha) are common in the Chesapeake Bay during the summer months. During oyster growth the oyster larvae spend about two weeks floating in the Bay before they settle onto a place where they mature. Sea nettles can catch the oyster larvae, but they spit them back out undigested and unharmed. The comb jelly however will eat the larvae immediately. The sea nettles favorite food is comb jellies. So during the summer months it brings the comb jellies population down to almost 0. Sea Nettle abundance http://www.eco-check.org/summerreview/chesapeake/2009/indicators/sea_nettles/ Why did the sea nettles die off so fast? While there was a spike of sea nettles in late august the scientists noticed there numbers drop off extremely quickly. This was before the usual time when the water drops below their optimum temperature. It was noticed that all the sea nettles were losing their oral arms and overall shrinking in diameter during the last two weeks they were there before they disappeared completely. The effect of anoxic water? Anoxia overall was higher than the average. However, hypoxic conditions were down on average in 2009. What does this mean for our water quality? How bad was the water? Anthropocentric effects? Pollution – nutrient runoff from the mainland can increase nutrients in the water and cause algal blooms that cover and destroy the existing underwater vegetation. Pesticides, oil, and sediment can also be included in runoff from the mainland. Detrimental oyster collecting techniques, blast fishing, deep water trawling Harvesting of oysters for human consumption Ships that come into port bringing invasive species and diseases. Oil spills during spawning. WAIT! Why do these sound familiar????? References Newell, R.I. Ecological changes in Chesapeake Bay: Are They the Result of Overharvesting the American Oyster, Crassostrea virginica? “http://web.vims.edu/GreyLit/crc129.pdf?svr=www” NOAA and University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science. Chesapeake EcoCheck. Assessing and Forcasting Ecosystem Status. http://www.ecocheck.org/summerreview/chesapeake/2009/indicators/sea_nettles/, 2009 Breitburg, D.L, Loher, T. Pacey, C.A., Gerstein, A. Varying effects of Low Dissolved Oxygen on Trophic Interactions in an Estuarine Food Web. Ecological Mongraphs, Vol. 67, No.4, pp. 489-507. 1997. Silliman, B.R., Layman, C.A., Altieri, A.H., Symbiosis between an Alpheid Shrimp and a Xanthoid Crab in Salt Marshes of Mid-Atlantic States, U.S.A.. Journal of Crustacean Biology, Vol. 23, No.4, pp. 876-879. 2003. Mansueti, R. Symbiotic Behavior between Small Fishes and Jellyfishes, with New Data on That between the Stromateid, Peprilus alepidotus, and the Scyphomedusa, Chrysaora quinquecirrha. Copeia, Vol 1963, No. 1, pp. 40-80. 1963. NOAA. http://oceanservice.noaa.gov/education/kits/corals/coral09_humanthreats.html, 2010. NOAA. http://oceanservice.noaa.gov/education/kits/corals/coral02_zooxanthellae.html, 2010. Tan, L.W., Ng, P.K. A Guide to Seashore Life. Singapore Science Centre. http://mangrove.nus.edu.sg/pub/seashore/text/265.htm. 2010 Purcell, J. E. Jellyfish in Chesapeake bay and Nearby Waters. http://www.intercom.net/local/shore_journal/jp010716.html. Knowlton, N. and Rohwer, F. Multispecies Mutualisms on Coral Reefs: The Host as a Habitat. The American Naturalist. Vol. 162, No.4, pp. S51-S62. 2003.