Resilience to disturbance despite limited dispersal and self-recruitment in tropical barrel sponges: implications for conservation and management.

While estimates of connectivity are important for effective management, few such estimates are available for reef invertebrates other than for corals. Barrel sponges are one of the largest and most conspicuous members of the coral reef fauna across the Indo-Pacific and given their large size, longev...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: James J Bell, David Smith, Danielle Hannan, Abdul Haris, Jamaludin Jompa, Luke Thomas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3961256?pdf=render
_version_ 1818954026082893824
author James J Bell
David Smith
Danielle Hannan
Abdul Haris
Jamaludin Jompa
Luke Thomas
author_facet James J Bell
David Smith
Danielle Hannan
Abdul Haris
Jamaludin Jompa
Luke Thomas
author_sort James J Bell
collection DOAJ
description While estimates of connectivity are important for effective management, few such estimates are available for reef invertebrates other than for corals. Barrel sponges are one of the largest and most conspicuous members of the coral reef fauna across the Indo-Pacific and given their large size, longevity and ability to process large volumes of water, they have a major role in reef functioning. Here we used a panel of microsatellite markers to characterise the genetic structure of two barrel sponge species, Xestospongia testudinaria and a currently undescribed Xestospongia species. We sampled across seven populations in the Wakatobi Marine National Park, SE Sulawesi (Indonesia) spanning a spatial scale of approximately 2 to 70 km, and present the first estimates of demographic connectivity for coral reef sponges. Genetic analyses showed high levels of genetic differentiation between all populations for both species, but contrasting patterns of genetic structuring for the two species. Autocorrelation analyses showed the likely dispersal distances of both species to be in the order of 60 and 140 m for Xestopongia sp. and Xestospongia testudinaria, respectively, which was supported by assignment tests that showed high levels of self-recruitment (>80%). We also found consistently high inbreeding coefficients across all populations for both species. Our study highlights the potential susceptibility of barrel sponges to environmental perturbations because they are generally long-lived, slow growing, have small population sizes and are likely to be reliant on self-recruitment. Surprisingly, despite these features we actually found the highest abundance of both barrel sponge species (although they were generally smaller) at a site that has been severely impacted by humans over the last fifty years. This suggests that barrel sponges exhibit environmental adaptation to declining environmental quality and has important implications for the management and conservation of these important reef species.
first_indexed 2024-12-20T10:15:37Z
format Article
id doaj.art-fbee7d0a257d4a699ac0915c34250edb
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1932-6203
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-20T10:15:37Z
publishDate 2014-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS ONE
spelling doaj.art-fbee7d0a257d4a699ac0915c34250edb2022-12-21T19:44:04ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0193e9163510.1371/journal.pone.0091635Resilience to disturbance despite limited dispersal and self-recruitment in tropical barrel sponges: implications for conservation and management.James J BellDavid SmithDanielle HannanAbdul HarisJamaludin JompaLuke ThomasWhile estimates of connectivity are important for effective management, few such estimates are available for reef invertebrates other than for corals. Barrel sponges are one of the largest and most conspicuous members of the coral reef fauna across the Indo-Pacific and given their large size, longevity and ability to process large volumes of water, they have a major role in reef functioning. Here we used a panel of microsatellite markers to characterise the genetic structure of two barrel sponge species, Xestospongia testudinaria and a currently undescribed Xestospongia species. We sampled across seven populations in the Wakatobi Marine National Park, SE Sulawesi (Indonesia) spanning a spatial scale of approximately 2 to 70 km, and present the first estimates of demographic connectivity for coral reef sponges. Genetic analyses showed high levels of genetic differentiation between all populations for both species, but contrasting patterns of genetic structuring for the two species. Autocorrelation analyses showed the likely dispersal distances of both species to be in the order of 60 and 140 m for Xestopongia sp. and Xestospongia testudinaria, respectively, which was supported by assignment tests that showed high levels of self-recruitment (>80%). We also found consistently high inbreeding coefficients across all populations for both species. Our study highlights the potential susceptibility of barrel sponges to environmental perturbations because they are generally long-lived, slow growing, have small population sizes and are likely to be reliant on self-recruitment. Surprisingly, despite these features we actually found the highest abundance of both barrel sponge species (although they were generally smaller) at a site that has been severely impacted by humans over the last fifty years. This suggests that barrel sponges exhibit environmental adaptation to declining environmental quality and has important implications for the management and conservation of these important reef species.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3961256?pdf=render
spellingShingle James J Bell
David Smith
Danielle Hannan
Abdul Haris
Jamaludin Jompa
Luke Thomas
Resilience to disturbance despite limited dispersal and self-recruitment in tropical barrel sponges: implications for conservation and management.
PLoS ONE
title Resilience to disturbance despite limited dispersal and self-recruitment in tropical barrel sponges: implications for conservation and management.
title_full Resilience to disturbance despite limited dispersal and self-recruitment in tropical barrel sponges: implications for conservation and management.
title_fullStr Resilience to disturbance despite limited dispersal and self-recruitment in tropical barrel sponges: implications for conservation and management.
title_full_unstemmed Resilience to disturbance despite limited dispersal and self-recruitment in tropical barrel sponges: implications for conservation and management.
title_short Resilience to disturbance despite limited dispersal and self-recruitment in tropical barrel sponges: implications for conservation and management.
title_sort resilience to disturbance despite limited dispersal and self recruitment in tropical barrel sponges implications for conservation and management
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3961256?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT jamesjbell resiliencetodisturbancedespitelimiteddispersalandselfrecruitmentintropicalbarrelspongesimplicationsforconservationandmanagement
AT davidsmith resiliencetodisturbancedespitelimiteddispersalandselfrecruitmentintropicalbarrelspongesimplicationsforconservationandmanagement
AT daniellehannan resiliencetodisturbancedespitelimiteddispersalandselfrecruitmentintropicalbarrelspongesimplicationsforconservationandmanagement
AT abdulharis resiliencetodisturbancedespitelimiteddispersalandselfrecruitmentintropicalbarrelspongesimplicationsforconservationandmanagement
AT jamaludinjompa resiliencetodisturbancedespitelimiteddispersalandselfrecruitmentintropicalbarrelspongesimplicationsforconservationandmanagement
AT lukethomas resiliencetodisturbancedespitelimiteddispersalandselfrecruitmentintropicalbarrelspongesimplicationsforconservationandmanagement