Determinants of the onset and strength of mutualistic interactions between branching corals and associate crabs

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Abstract

In mutualisms involving a host and symbiotic resident, the nature and strength of their interactions are unlikely to be constant over time or space. The efficacy of such mutualisms can be crucial to the population dynamics of one or both partners, particularly where survival bottlenecks occur at early life stages. In laboratory and field outplant experiments, we explored determinants of the onset of mutualistic interactions between early stages of branching corals and their trapeziid crab partners. We confirmed that recently settled crabs are capable of providing housekeeping services to their young coral partners (as has been reported for older crabs and corals), and the presence of a crab in areas of high sedimentation conferred growth benefits ~3 times as strong compared with low sediment conditions. We also showed that recruitment of post-larval crabs to very young corals increases with morphological complexity of the coral, which relates to the ability of the host to provide micro-refugia for its crab symbiont, and indicates the potential for selective pressure for traits that attract and retain crabs during this high-mortality bottleneck life stage. These findings provide insight into the recruitment process and ontogenetic constraints that influence the onset of mutualistic interactions between corals and their associated symbionts. © Inter-Research 2013.

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Stewart, H. L., Price, N. N., Holbrook, S. J., Schmitt, R. J., & Brooks, A. J. (2013). Determinants of the onset and strength of mutualistic interactions between branching corals and associate crabs. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 493, 155–163. https://doi.org/10.3354/meps10525

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