Behavioural and oceanographic isolation of an island-based jellyfish (Copula sivickisi, Class Cubozoa) population
Abstract Cubozoan jellyfish are classified as plankton despite the strong swimming and orientation abilities of cubomedusae. How these capabilities could affect cubozoan population structures is poorly understood. Medusae of the cubozoan Copula sivickisi can uniquely attach to surfaces with the stic...
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2021-05-01
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Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-89755-7 |
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doaj-e3fba2c04517465c940227adc55b10f62021-05-16T11:23:48ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222021-05-0111111110.1038/s41598-021-89755-7Behavioural and oceanographic isolation of an island-based jellyfish (Copula sivickisi, Class Cubozoa) populationJodie A. Schlaefer0Eric Wolanski1Jonathan Lambrechts2Michael J. Kingsford3Research Hub for Coral Reef Ecosystem Functions, James Cook UniversityCollege of Science and Engineering, James Cook UniversityInstitute of Mechanics, Materials and Civil Engineering, Université de LouvainCollege of Science and Engineering, James Cook UniversityAbstract Cubozoan jellyfish are classified as plankton despite the strong swimming and orientation abilities of cubomedusae. How these capabilities could affect cubozoan population structures is poorly understood. Medusae of the cubozoan Copula sivickisi can uniquely attach to surfaces with the sticky pads on their bells. Biophysical modelling was used to investigate the spatial scales of connectivity in a C. sivickisi population. When the medusae were active at night they could maintain their observed distribution on fringing reef if they attached to the reef when the current speed exceeded a moderate threshold. This behaviour facilitated the isolation of a C. sivickisi population on reefs fringing Magnetic Island, Queensland, Australia. Within this distribution, there was considerable within bay retention and medusae rarely travelled > 3 km. The few (< 0.1%) medusae lost from the island habitat were largely advected into open water and away from the mainland coast which lies 8 km from the island. Given that successful emigration is unlikely, the island population probably represents a stock that is ecologically distinct from any mainland populations. The cosmopolitan distribution of C. sivickisi could contain incipient or cryptic species given the small scales of connectivity demonstrated here.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-89755-7 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Jodie A. Schlaefer Eric Wolanski Jonathan Lambrechts Michael J. Kingsford |
spellingShingle |
Jodie A. Schlaefer Eric Wolanski Jonathan Lambrechts Michael J. Kingsford Behavioural and oceanographic isolation of an island-based jellyfish (Copula sivickisi, Class Cubozoa) population Scientific Reports |
author_facet |
Jodie A. Schlaefer Eric Wolanski Jonathan Lambrechts Michael J. Kingsford |
author_sort |
Jodie A. Schlaefer |
title |
Behavioural and oceanographic isolation of an island-based jellyfish (Copula sivickisi, Class Cubozoa) population |
title_short |
Behavioural and oceanographic isolation of an island-based jellyfish (Copula sivickisi, Class Cubozoa) population |
title_full |
Behavioural and oceanographic isolation of an island-based jellyfish (Copula sivickisi, Class Cubozoa) population |
title_fullStr |
Behavioural and oceanographic isolation of an island-based jellyfish (Copula sivickisi, Class Cubozoa) population |
title_full_unstemmed |
Behavioural and oceanographic isolation of an island-based jellyfish (Copula sivickisi, Class Cubozoa) population |
title_sort |
behavioural and oceanographic isolation of an island-based jellyfish (copula sivickisi, class cubozoa) population |
publisher |
Nature Publishing Group |
series |
Scientific Reports |
issn |
2045-2322 |
publishDate |
2021-05-01 |
description |
Abstract Cubozoan jellyfish are classified as plankton despite the strong swimming and orientation abilities of cubomedusae. How these capabilities could affect cubozoan population structures is poorly understood. Medusae of the cubozoan Copula sivickisi can uniquely attach to surfaces with the sticky pads on their bells. Biophysical modelling was used to investigate the spatial scales of connectivity in a C. sivickisi population. When the medusae were active at night they could maintain their observed distribution on fringing reef if they attached to the reef when the current speed exceeded a moderate threshold. This behaviour facilitated the isolation of a C. sivickisi population on reefs fringing Magnetic Island, Queensland, Australia. Within this distribution, there was considerable within bay retention and medusae rarely travelled > 3 km. The few (< 0.1%) medusae lost from the island habitat were largely advected into open water and away from the mainland coast which lies 8 km from the island. Given that successful emigration is unlikely, the island population probably represents a stock that is ecologically distinct from any mainland populations. The cosmopolitan distribution of C. sivickisi could contain incipient or cryptic species given the small scales of connectivity demonstrated here. |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-89755-7 |
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