Frontiers in Marine Science (Aug 2022)

Spatial variability in the abundance and prey selection of the corallivorous snail Drupella spp. in the southeastern Hainan Island, China

  • Xinming Lei,
  • Xinming Lei,
  • Xinming Lei,
  • Chengyue Liu,
  • Chengyue Liu,
  • Chengyue Liu,
  • Yuyang Zhang,
  • Yuyang Zhang,
  • Yuyang Zhang,
  • Xiaolei Yu,
  • Xiaolei Yu,
  • Jianhui Yang,
  • Jianhui Yang,
  • Yong Luo,
  • Yong Luo,
  • Guowei Zhou,
  • Guowei Zhou,
  • Hui Huang,
  • Hui Huang,
  • Hui Huang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2022.990113
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Global climate change has caused extensive loss of biodiversity and ecosystem function globally, particularly in coral reefs in shallow tropical waters. As the corallivorous snails represent considerable disturbances to coral reefs across Indo-Pacific region, it is becoming a threat to coral health and recovery in the Hainan Island, South China Sea, but current-knowledge gap remains on the spatial distribution, prey preferences, and the influence factors related. Thus, we investigated the abundance distribution of Drupella spp. in relation to coral-prey selectivity, availability, and nutritional value. The snail density was heterogeneously distributed in the study area with an average of 0.72 ± 0.32 ind m−2 (varying from 0.09 ± 0.03 to 1.78 ± 0.39 ind m−2), and the snail density was found generally higher in locations with higher coral cover, which resulted in much lower density where their preferred corals became scarce. Despite the snails showing a positive preference for Acroporidae corals, they displayed dietary plasticity by changing with prey abundance and availability. Further, we found the electivity index of the coral prey related to the substrate types, and the nutritional value of prey was an additional important determinant in the prey preference, suggesting that the specific reef habitat and environmental context may alter the prey preference of Drupella spp. Combined, these results provide preliminary evidence that Drupella spp. is among the common corallivories in the reef regions of Hainan Island, and we recommend that large-scale monitoring programs assess the spatial-temporal trends to better understand the dynamics of predation linked to both anthropogenic and natural impacts.

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