Abundance modulates the ecosystem functional contributions of two sympatric Caribbean sea cucumbers

PeerJ. 2023 Feb 16:11:e14823. doi: 10.7717/peerj.14823. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

In highly diverse systems such as coral reefs, many species appear to fulfil similar ecological roles, suggesting that they might be ecologically equivalent. However, even if species provide similar functions, the magnitude of those roles could modulate their impact within ecosystems. Here, we compare the functional contributions of two common, co-occurring Caribbean sea cucumber species, Holothuria mexicana and Actynopyga agassizii, in terms of ammonium provisioning and sediment processing on Bahamian patch reefs. We quantified these functions through empirical measures of ammonium excretion, and in situ observations of sediment processing coupled with fecal pellet collections. On a per-individual level, H. mexicana excreted approximately 23% more ammonium and processed approximately 53% more sediment per hour than A. agassizii. However, when we combined these species-specific functional rates to species abundances to produce reef-wide estimates, we found that A. agassizii contributed more than H. mexicana to sediment processing at 57% of reefs (1.9 times more per unit area across all surveyed reefs), and more to ammonium excretion at 83% of reefs (5.6 times more ammonium per unit area across all surveyed reefs), owing to its higher abundance. We conclude that sea cucumber species can differ in the rates at which they deliver per capita ecosystem functions but their ecological impacts at the population level depend on their abundance at a given location.

Keywords: Animal-derived nutrients; Consumer-mediated nutrients; Coral reefs; Ecosystem function; Holothuroids; Nitrogen provisioning; Sea cucumbers; Sediment processing.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Caribbean Region
  • Coral Reefs
  • Ecosystem
  • Holothuria*
  • Humans
  • Sea Cucumbers*

Grants and funding

Rachel Munger was supported by a Graduate International Travel Award from Simon Fraser University, and fieldwork was supported by an NSERC Discovery Grant to IMC (RGPIN-03933-2017). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.