饵料和放养密度对白棘三列海胆行为的影响

Effects of bait and stocking density on the behavior of Tripneustes gratilla

  • 摘要:
    目的 探究放养密度与饵料对白棘三列海胆运动行为的调控影响,阐明其聚集行为的内在驱动因素。
    方法 在2 m2水池中对白棘三列海胆开展双因素控制实验:设置低(0.5 只/m2)、中(4 只/m2)、高(8 只/m2) 3种密度梯度,以及饵料(有/无海带) 2种处理。采用缩时摄影系统(每5 s一帧,持续15 min)记录海胆运动轨迹,利用ImageJ软件进行逐帧追踪,量化分析以下运动行为参数:移动速度、净位移、离心位移距离、运动随机度和线性指数。
    结果 随密度升高,白棘三列海胆移动速度和净位移显著降低,中密度组已出现明显抑制,高密度组未进一步下降;饵料的存在进一步抑制各密度组的移动速度、净位移和离心位移距离;密度与饵料对运动速度存在极显著交互作用。物理接触并非导致运动抑制的主要原因,表明白棘三列海胆能通过化学信号感知同类与饵料。
    结论 白棘三列海胆的运动行为受种群密度与饵料的协同调控,表现为运动强度显著抑制,且主要依赖非接触性化学信号。本研究为其聚集行为的生态驱动提供了实验证据,推进了海洋食草动物行为生态学认知,并为海胆种群管理与海藻、海草生态系统保护提供了行为学切入点。

     

    Abstract: Sea urchins are keystone herbivores in coastal ecosystems, yet their high-density aggregations can trigger overgrazing and habitat degradation. The formation of grazing fronts is hypothesized to result from interactions between conspecific density and resource availability, but the behavioral mechanisms modulating individual movement—the fundamental unit of aggregation—remain poorly understood for many ecologically important species. This study aimed to dissect the independent and synergistic effects of population density and bait presence on the movement behavior of the collector sea urchin (Tripneustes gratilla). We tested whether both factors suppress movement intensity, whether their combined effect is synergistic, and whether non-contact signals, rather than physical interference, mediate this regulation. A two-factor laboratory experiment was conducted. Sea urchins test diameter: (9.36 ± 0.73) cm were exposed to three density levels (low: 0.5 ind./m2; medium: 4 ind./m2; high: 8 ind./m2) with or without a centralized bait patch in a 2 m2 arena. Movement was recorded via overhead time-lapse photography (5 s intervals, 15 min trials). Trajectories were analyzed using ImageJ to quantify movement speed, net displacement, displacement distance away from the center, linearity index, and mean resultant length R. Two-way ANOVA, Tukey’s HSD, and mixed-effects models were used for statistical analysis. Both increasing density and bait presence significantly suppressed movement intensity. Speed and net displacement declined markedly from low to medium density speed: (1.47 ± 0.49) mm/s to (0.71 ± 0.20) mm/s, with no further reduction at high density (0.67 ± 0.24) mm/s, indicating a saturation effect. Bait presence reduced speed across all densities e.g., low density: (1.47 ± 0.49) mm/s vs. (0.60 ± 0.26) mm/s; medium density: (0.71 ± 0.20) mm/s vs. (0.34 ± 0.12) mm/s. The strongest suppression occurred under combined high density and bait presence, where movement nearly ceased speed: (0.20 ± 0.06) mm/s; net displacement: (10.41 ± 4.92) cm. A significant density × bait interaction (F 2,30 = 7.999, P = 0.002) confirmed synergistic effects on speed. Neither factor altered movement directionality (linearity index, mean result length R). Brief physical contact caused instantaneous speed reductions, but long-term suppression was uncorrelated with contact frequency or duration, strongly implicating non-contact chemical cues as the primary regulatory mechanism. The movement behavior of T. gratilla is synergistically modulated by population density and bait cues. This response manifests as density-dependent and food-induced suppression of movement intensity, without changes in path straightness, and is governed predominantly by non-contact signaling. This study provides mechanistic evidence linking individual behavioral plasticity to population-level grazing fronts. The finding that sea urchins drastically reduce mobility and concentrate activity near food under crowded conditions directly links individual decisions to ecosystem-level impacts. These insights inform predictive modeling and support behavior-based strategies for managing sea urchin populations to mitigate overgrazing and aid in the restoration of vulnerable macroalgal and seagrass ecosystems.

     

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