PeerJ (Nov 2018)

All you can eat: the functional response of the cold-water coral Desmophyllum dianthus feeding on krill and copepods

  • Juan Höfer,
  • Humberto E. González,
  • Jürgen Laudien,
  • Gertraud M. Schmidt,
  • Verena Häussermann,
  • Claudio Richter

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.5872
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6
p. e5872

Abstract

Read online Read online

The feeding behavior of the cosmopolitan cold-water coral (CWC) Desmophyllum dianthus (Cnidaria: Scleractinia) is still poorly known. Its usual deep distribution restricts direct observations, and manipulative experiments are so far limited to prey that do not occur in CWC natural habitat. During a series of replicated incubations, we assessed the functional response of this coral feeding on a medium-sized copepod (Calanoides patagoniensis) and a large euphausiid (Euphausia vallentini). Corals showed a Type I functional response, where feeding rate increased linearly with prey abundance, as predicted for a tentaculate passive suspension feeder. No significant differences in feeding were found between prey items, and corals were able to attain a maximum feeding rate of 10.99 mg C h−1, which represents an ingestion of the 11.4% of the coral carbon biomass per hour. These findings suggest that D. dianthus is a generalist zooplankton predator capable of exploiting dense aggregations of zooplankton over a wide prey size-range.

Keywords