Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Drop and Roll! Sea Urchin ESCAPE Behavior!

(Art by Echinoblog Art Department!)
We look at the sea urchin Tetrapygus niger in response to the two starfish predators! The blog today is from a new paper (2012) by Juan Diego Urriago, John Himmelman, and Carlos Gaymer in Marine Ecology Progress Series 444: 85-95.

First the 6 armed Meyenaster gelatinosus (an asteriid related to Pisaster or Asterias)
Estrella Jupiter
Picture by azulprofundo5170
and the heliasterid Heliaster helianthus 
Heliaster Helianthus
  Photo by Maurice AndrĂ©

So, let's get right to it!
Basically the sea urchin T. niger was observed in surprisingly high abundance living on elevated rock surfaces. 

So, tops of boulders, rocks and so on..especially relative to the two aforementioned well-known sea star predators H. helianthus and M. gelatinosus. Their Figure 1 shows the proportion of overall "high surfaces" were covered by sea urchins relative to their predators..
                                                      

The reason for this unusual difference in the location of sea urchins vs. sea stars. Why do so many sea urchins live on elevated rockfaces???   This cartoon from Echinoblog Art Dept. explains it best!

Predatory starfish approaches up the cliff face!  Sea urchins can SMELL predators approaching based on the odor of the predator brought up via water currents.  They SENSE that something bad is coming...
The urchins are trying to prevent THIS from happening!!!! 
Estrella Jupiter
Meyenaster feeding on Tetrapygus. Image by Azulprofundo5170
Here we have some T. niger amidst some yummy kelp on a vertical (presumably elevated) rockface...
UlvaandUrchins
Tetrapygus niger photo by Jabaezam
When it becomes clear that the starfish is out for some good sea urchin eatin or when it just starts to ATTACK! (i.e. the predator is in direct or close contact) the urchins DETATCH from the rock face and let the gravity do the rest!!!

In other words they JUMP For it!! Drop and ROLL!
(note that the Echinoblog Art Dept. reconstruction below is somewhat exaggerated..)

This immediately removes the threat of the oncoming predator and puts a pretty solid distance between the predator and the prey! 

The starfish is of course, unable to just "release" its tube feet since they are more flattened in shape and holding on with their bottom surface! 

Kind of clever, eh? 

Here is the graph (their Figure 3A) that shows an experiment that showed how many sea urchin detatchments occurred when they artificially motivated the sea urchins to detatch in reaction to predators and parallel control actions.
                                      

Thus, the "jump" response happened only in reaction to direct contact with predators and not simply the "smell" of them approaching

Figure 3B (above) shows what happened after contact but without detachment. Their behavioral cue was to proceed higher up the boulder.

Its worth noting that Just because the urchins would "fall" did not guarantee their overall survival or even escape. Spines or other structures could break. And if an urchin falls upside down and a starfish happens to be there? Yikes!

Interestingly, the "detatch" and "get carried away by the current" approach is also seen in starfish vs. starfish interactions, snail vs. starfish interactions and in other sea urchins. 
Some Dynamics!
Meyenaster gelatinosus

Various experimental trials showed some further depth..

  1. Of the two sea star predators-Meyenaster gelatinosus was regarded as the greater threat to the sea urchins. Heliaster (the sun star) illicited an escape response (i.e., the sea urchin moves away VERY quickly once it senses the predator) but not as severe as the one that Meyenaster did.
  2. Meyenaster's preference is to be on lower ground (it moved there when placed on boulders) whereas the urchins preferred to live on elevated surfaces such as boulders and so forth..
  3. Sea urchin survival was considered higher on elevated surfaces and is considered to be primarily a defensive behavior since food is actually rare on these elevated surfaces (contrary to the picture above).
  4. It turns out that fish are ALSO predators of these sea urchins which at one time may have preyed upon the urchins on top of the rocks, boulders and elevated surfaces.. 
    One interesting observation by the authors was that owing to the overfishing of various fish predators, there may be an increase in the overall abundance of sea urchins. This in turn may have led to the "importance" of these starfish as predators in the observed ecosystem.

People often wonder why little natural history stories like this are important?  This gives us some perspective on the importance of how removing fish can conceivably cascade into something more. 

There were MANY different invertebrate taxa that were shown to interact with those sea urchins. Understanding even a small segment of the interaction might be important to understanding how changes in the ecology have shifted their community structure..

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

The heat getting to you Chris?

Unknown said...

Aloha,

I'm Juan Diego the first Author of the paper. I really appreciate the way you told the story of the paper.

Best,

ChrisM said...

Thanks! Always great to know I am getting it right!