Deterrent activities in the crude lipophilic fractions of Antarctic benthic organisms: chemical defences against keystone predators

Generalist predation constitutes a driving force for the evolution of chemical defences. In the Antarctic benthos, asteroids and omnivore amphipods are keystone opportunistic predators. Sessile organisms are therefore expected to develop defensive mechanisms mainly against such consumers. However, t...

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Main Authors: Laura Núñez-Pons, Conxita Avila
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Norwegian Polar Institute 2014-04-01
Series:Polar Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.polarresearch.net/index.php/polar/article/download/21624/pdf_1
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spelling doaj-30b2740ba86d499499c0677d738459f02020-11-24T22:45:59Zeng Norwegian Polar InstitutePolar Research1751-83692014-04-0133011210.3402/polar.v33.2162421624Deterrent activities in the crude lipophilic fractions of Antarctic benthic organisms: chemical defences against keystone predatorsLaura Núñez-Pons0Conxita Avila1Department of Animal Biology (Invertebrates) & Biodiversity Research Institute, Faculty of Biology, University of Barcelona, Av. Diagonal 643, ES-08028 Barcelona, Catalonia, SpainDepartment of Animal Biology (Invertebrates) & Biodiversity Research Institute, Faculty of Biology, University of Barcelona, Av. Diagonal 643, ES-08028 Barcelona, Catalonia, SpainGeneralist predation constitutes a driving force for the evolution of chemical defences. In the Antarctic benthos, asteroids and omnivore amphipods are keystone opportunistic predators. Sessile organisms are therefore expected to develop defensive mechanisms mainly against such consumers. However, the different habits characterizing each predator may promote variable responses in prey. Feeding-deterrence experiments were performed with the circumpolar asteroid macropredator Odontaster validus to evaluate the presence of defences within the apolar lipophilic fraction of Antarctic invertebrates and macroalgae. A total of 51% of the extracts were repellent, yielding a proportion of 17 defended species out of the 31 assessed. These results are compared with a previous study in which the same fractions were offered to the abundant circum-Antarctic amphipod Cheirimedon femoratus. Overall, less deterrence was reported towards asteroids (51%) than against amphipods (80.8%), principally in sponge and algal extracts. Generalist amphipods, which establish casual host–prey sedentary associations with biosubstrata (preferentially sponges and macroalgae), may exert more localized predation pressure than sea stars on certain sessile prey, which would partly explain these results. The nutritional quality of prey may interact with feeding deterrents, whose production is presumed to be metabolically expensive. Although optimal defence theory posits that chemical defences are managed and distributed as to guarantee protection at the lowest cost, we found that only a few organisms localized feeding deterrents towards most exposed and/or valuable body regions. Lipophilic defensive metabolites are broadly produced in Antarctic communities to deter opportunistic predators, although several species combine different defensive traits.http://www.polarresearch.net/index.php/polar/article/download/21624/pdf_1Antarctic invertebratesAntarctic algaechemical ecologysea star Odontaster validusamphipod Cheirimedon femoratuschemical defence
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laura Núñez-Pons
Conxita Avila
spellingShingle Laura Núñez-Pons
Conxita Avila
Deterrent activities in the crude lipophilic fractions of Antarctic benthic organisms: chemical defences against keystone predators
Polar Research
Antarctic invertebrates
Antarctic algae
chemical ecology
sea star Odontaster validus
amphipod Cheirimedon femoratus
chemical defence
author_facet Laura Núñez-Pons
Conxita Avila
author_sort Laura Núñez-Pons
title Deterrent activities in the crude lipophilic fractions of Antarctic benthic organisms: chemical defences against keystone predators
title_short Deterrent activities in the crude lipophilic fractions of Antarctic benthic organisms: chemical defences against keystone predators
title_full Deterrent activities in the crude lipophilic fractions of Antarctic benthic organisms: chemical defences against keystone predators
title_fullStr Deterrent activities in the crude lipophilic fractions of Antarctic benthic organisms: chemical defences against keystone predators
title_full_unstemmed Deterrent activities in the crude lipophilic fractions of Antarctic benthic organisms: chemical defences against keystone predators
title_sort deterrent activities in the crude lipophilic fractions of antarctic benthic organisms: chemical defences against keystone predators
publisher Norwegian Polar Institute
series Polar Research
issn 1751-8369
publishDate 2014-04-01
description Generalist predation constitutes a driving force for the evolution of chemical defences. In the Antarctic benthos, asteroids and omnivore amphipods are keystone opportunistic predators. Sessile organisms are therefore expected to develop defensive mechanisms mainly against such consumers. However, the different habits characterizing each predator may promote variable responses in prey. Feeding-deterrence experiments were performed with the circumpolar asteroid macropredator Odontaster validus to evaluate the presence of defences within the apolar lipophilic fraction of Antarctic invertebrates and macroalgae. A total of 51% of the extracts were repellent, yielding a proportion of 17 defended species out of the 31 assessed. These results are compared with a previous study in which the same fractions were offered to the abundant circum-Antarctic amphipod Cheirimedon femoratus. Overall, less deterrence was reported towards asteroids (51%) than against amphipods (80.8%), principally in sponge and algal extracts. Generalist amphipods, which establish casual host–prey sedentary associations with biosubstrata (preferentially sponges and macroalgae), may exert more localized predation pressure than sea stars on certain sessile prey, which would partly explain these results. The nutritional quality of prey may interact with feeding deterrents, whose production is presumed to be metabolically expensive. Although optimal defence theory posits that chemical defences are managed and distributed as to guarantee protection at the lowest cost, we found that only a few organisms localized feeding deterrents towards most exposed and/or valuable body regions. Lipophilic defensive metabolites are broadly produced in Antarctic communities to deter opportunistic predators, although several species combine different defensive traits.
topic Antarctic invertebrates
Antarctic algae
chemical ecology
sea star Odontaster validus
amphipod Cheirimedon femoratus
chemical defence
url http://www.polarresearch.net/index.php/polar/article/download/21624/pdf_1
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AT conxitaavila deterrentactivitiesinthecrudelipophilicfractionsofantarcticbenthicorganismschemicaldefencesagainstkeystonepredators
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