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Evaluating potential artifacts of tethering techniques to estimate predation on sea urchins

Authors :
Boada, Jordi
Sanmartí, Neus
Selden, Rebecca L.
Lucas Forcadell, Arturo
Pérez, Marta M.
Alcoverro, Teresa
Romero, Javier
Boada, Jordi
Sanmartí, Neus
Selden, Rebecca L.
Lucas Forcadell, Arturo
Pérez, Marta M.
Alcoverro, Teresa
Romero, Javier
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Measuring the strength of trophic interactions in marine systems has been central to our understanding of community structuring. Sea urchin tethering has been the method of choice to evaluate rates of predation in marine benthic ecosystems. As standardly practiced, this method involves piercing the urchin test, potentially introducing significantmethodological artifacts thatmay influence survival or detection by predators.Herewe assess possible artifacts of tethering comparing invasive (pierced) and non-invasive tethering techniques using the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus. Specifically, we looked at how degree of confinement and high water temperature (first order artifacts) and predator guild and size of the prey (second order artifacts) affect the survival and/or detectability of pierced urchins. Our results show that first order artifacts only arise when pierced sea urchins are placed in sheltered bayswith confined waters, especiallywhenwater temperature reaches extremely high levels. Prey detectability did not increase in pierced sea urchins for the most common predators. Also, test piercing did not alter the preferences of predators for given prey sizes. Weconclude that the standard tethering technique is a robust method to test relative rates of sea urchin predation. However, local conditions could increasemortality of the tethered urchin in sheltered bays or in very high temperature regimes. Under these conditions, adequate pierced controls (within predator exclusions) need to be included in assays to evaluate artifactual sources of mortality.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1103422788
Document Type :
Electronic Resource