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Marine herbivore-plant interactions : the feeding ecology of the sea slug Placida dendritica

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

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Title Marine herbivore-plant interactions : the feeding ecology of the sea slug Placida dendritica
Names Trowbridge, Cynthia D. (creator)
Lubchenco, Jane (advisor)
Menge, Bruce (advisor)
Date Issued 1989-08-18 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 1990
Abstract The feeding ecology of a common temperate
mesoherbivore, the oligophagous sea slug Placida
dendritica (Gastropoda: Opisthobranchia: Ascoglossa), was
examined from April 1985 to June 1989. Along the central
coast of Oregon, Placida consumed three host species:
the low intertidal green algae Codium setchellii, C.
fragile, and Bryopsis corticulans. Individual slugs
tended to specialize on a single algal host species with
limited capacity to change host species. In laboratory
experiments, many individuals died in the presence of
unfamiliar host species that sympatric conspecifics
consumed. This rigid diet specificity was not modifiable
through hunger level, algal condition, or intraspecific
interaction. Placida populations, therefore, were
functionally subdivided into sympatric subpopulations.
Placida formed feeding congregations on Codium spp.
Members of groups composed of similar-sized slugs grew
significantly faster than solitary individuals. In
mixed-sized congregations, however, trophic benefits were
not shared equally among all members. Small slugs always
benefited from the presence of conspecifics; large slugs,
however, benefited only if conspecifics were large. The
mechanisms of intraspecific facilitation involved both
behavioral stimulation of feeding and modification of
algal food quality.
Placida was numerically and functionally the major
herbivore of C. setchellii. The alga had a partial
refuge from the slug in high sand or wave disturbance
habitats. Placida's attack was concentrated on algal
thalli whose anti-herbivore defenses were probably
compromised by stress: thalli in desiccation-prone
microhabitats and thalli with existing grazing damage.
Field transplant experiments indicated that Placida's
herbivory may restrict the between-habitat distribution
of C. setchellii along the central coast of Oregon.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Nudibranchia -- Feeding and feeds
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/40462

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