TL;DR: The results show that these two snail species are not inter- changeable and they provide complementary benefits to their host because they differ in their prey preferences, and complementary effects of mutualists on their hosts may be common.
Abstract: Although the importance of mutualisms in structuring communities is be- coming increasingly appreciated, relatively little is known about the degree to which po- tential mutualists are interchangeable with respect to the services they provide their host. We examined the degree to which potential mutualists of a seaweed provide complementary vs. redundant benefits to their host to begin to assess the effects of mutualist diversity on host performance. The gastropods Anachis lafresnayi(Costoanachis lafresnayi) and Mitrella lunata (Astyris lunata) are common associates of the red alga Chondrus crispusin subtidal locations in southern New England. Field surveys showed that where these snails were rare, Chondrus was sparse and covered with a heavy growth of sessile invertebrates, but where snails were common, Chondrus was abundant and free from fouling overgrowth. In manipulative field experiments, plants with no snails had the most overgrowth (measured both as percent cover and total mass) and lost 25% of their mass in five weeks. Plants with either species of snail alone were also heavily fouled and lost mass. Those with only Mitrella were overgrown by solitary ascidians, whereas those with only Anachis were overgrown by bryozoans, suggesting that both snails remove epibionts, but they differ in the suite of epibionts they are capable of removing. As a result, only Chondrus with both species of snail present remained unfouled and gained mass over the course of the experiment. Field tethering experiments showed that both snail species can gain a refuge from crab predation by associating with Chondrus. Our results show that these two snail species are not inter- changeable and they provide complementary benefits to their host because they differ in their prey preferences. If this type of differentiation in resource use often mediates co- existence among mutualists, then complementary effects of mutualists on their hosts may be common.
TL;DR: Processes affecting the growth and mortality of the juvenile benthic life-stages that immediately follow larval metamorphosis and settlement are as important as those processes controlling the supply of settling larvae or later interactions among established adults.
Abstract: Summary Processes affecting the growth and mortality of the juvenile benthic life-stages that immediately follow larval metamorphosis and settlement are as important as those processes controlling the supply of settling larvae or later interactions among established adults. In addition, the ecology of juveniles is of ten distinctly different from that of other life-stages, including differences in interactions with predators and competitors and responses to the physical environment. In particular, newly-settled stages of ten experience quantitatively or qualitatively different predation than older life-stages. We have documented this in a New England hard substrate community where the wrasse, Tautogolabrus adspersus, and two species of tiny gastropods, Mitrella lunata and Anachis lafresnayi, prey on newly-settled andjuvenile ascidians but not on adults. An extensive series of field experiments was conducted using artificial pilings placed subtidally. Results demonstrated that (1) the predators were extrem...
TL;DR: A new parasite is described as a new species, Neope- chona cablei, in the family Lepocreadiidae, that attacked and penetrated ctenophores and hydrozoan and scyphozoan medusae and developed to gravid adults in Stenotomus chrysops.
Abstract: Distomate, ocellate, trichocercous cercariae produced by rediae in the prosobranch gastropod, Mitrella lunata, were found at Woods Hole, Massachusetts. They attacked and penetrated ctenophores and hydrozoan and scyphozoan medusae. The metacercariae were not encysted. When fed to fishes, they developed to gravid adults in Stenotomus chrysops. The parasite is described as a new species, Neope- chona cablei, in the family Lepocreadiidae. It has long been known that certain medu- sae and ctenophores harbor unencysted meta- cercariae of digenetic trematodes. Two fami- lies of the parasites are represented, Fellodistomidae and Lepocreadiidae. Their metacercariae are distinguished readily by remnants of pigmented ocelli characteristic of the trichocercous cercariae of lepocreadids, and by the absence of such pigment in fello- distomids whose cercariae may be trichocer- cous but lack ocelli. From medusae and ctenophores in the Woods Hole area, unencysted metacercariae have been reported in life history studies for four species of trematodes: Lintonium vibex (Linton 1900), a fellodistomid, by Stunkard
TL;DR: Seven species of the rust genus Sphaerophragmium occur on members of the tropical plant family Annonaceae and the anatomy of telia with teliospores and parasitizing mycelium is described and illustrated in detail.
Abstract: Seven species of the rust genus Sphaerophragmium occur on members of the tropical plant family Annonaceae. Uropyxis gerstneri is recombined to S. gerstneri. A new species, S. xylopiae, is described from Xylopia acutiflora. The host plant of S. boanense is identified as Mitrella sp. Sphaerophragmium pulchrum is transferred to Dicheirinia. The anatomy of telia with teliospores and parasitizing mycelium is described and illustrated in detail. A new type of M-haustorium, which emanates laterally from intracellular hypha, is detected in S. monodorae. An identification key is given.