Background: In the predator-sea urchin-macrophyte trophic cascade, the ecological effect of sea urchins as grazers depends both on their density and the changes in foraging activity, which are influenced by various disturbing factors. However, the complete duration of the alarm reactions of echinoids has not been studied until now. Here, we tested a hypothesis that two cohabiting sea urchins, and , which differ morphologically, might display different behavioral responses to high hydrodynamic activity and predation.

Methods: We used continuous time-lapse video recording to clarify behavioral patterns of and in presence of a large quantity of food (the kelp ) but under different weather conditions and different types of predation threat: (1) calm weather conditions, (2) stormy weather conditions, (3) predation risk associated with the presence of several sea star species and (4) predation risk associated with an alarm stimulus (crushed conspecifics or heterospecifics). Three separate video recording experiments (134 days in total) were conducted under field conditions. Video recording analysis was performed to determine the number of specimens of each sea urchin species in the cameras' field of view, size of sea urchins' groups, movement patterns and the duration of the alarm responses of both sea urchin species.

Results: We showed that in the presence of kelp, and exhibited both similar and different behavioral responses to hydrodynamics and predation threat. Under calm weather, movement patterns of both echinoids were similar but exhibited the higher locomotion speed and distance traveled. Furthermore, but not tended to group near the food substrate. The stormy weather caused a sharp decrease in movement activity followed by escape response in both echinoids. Six starfish species failed to predate on healthy sea urchins of either species and only a few attacks on ailing specimens were successful. The alarm response of lasted approximately 90 h and 20 h for starfish attacks on ailing conspecifics and for simulated attacks (crushed conspecifics or heterospecifics), respectively and involved several phases: (1) flight response, (2) grouping close to the food, (3) leaving the food and (4) return to the food. Phase three was the more pronounced in a case of starfish attack. only responded to crushed conspecifics and exhibited no grouping behavior but displayed fast escape (during 4 h) and prolonged (up to 19 days) avoidance of the food source. This outcome is the longest alarm response reported for sea urchins.

Discussion: The most interesting finding is that two cohabiting sea urchin species, and , display different alarm responses to predation threat. Both alarm responses are interpreted as defensive adaptations against visual predators.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6876488PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.8087DOI Listing

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