Sponge symbiosis is facilitated by adaptive evolution of larval sensory and attachment structures in barnacles

Author:

Yu Meng-Chen12ORCID,Dreyer Niklas2345ORCID,Kolbasov Gregory Aleksandrovich6ORCID,Høeg Jens Thorvald7ORCID,Chan Benny Kwok Kan2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Doctoral Degree Program in Marine Biotechnology, National Sun Yat-sen University and Academia Sinica, Kaohsiung 80424, Taiwan

2. Biodiversity Research Center, Academia Sinica, Taipei 11529, Taiwan

3. Department of Life Science, National Taiwan Normal University, Taipei, Taiwan

4. Biodiversity Program, Taiwan International Graduate Program, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan

5. Natural History Museum of Denmark, University of Copenhagen, Universitetsparken 15, DK-2100 Copenhagen, Denmark

6. White Sea Biological Station, Biological Faculty of Moscow State University, Moscow 119899, Russia

7. Department of Biology, Marine Biological Section, University of Copenhagen, Universitetsparken 4, DK-2100 Copenhagen, Denmark

Abstract

Symbiotic relations and range of host usage are prominent in coral reefs and crucial to the stability of such systems. In order to explain how symbiotic relations are established and evolve, we used sponge-associated barnacles to ask three questions. (1) Does larval settlement on sponge hosts require novel adaptations facilitating symbiosis? (2) How do larvae settle and start life on their hosts? (3) How has this remarkable symbiotic lifestyle involving many barnacle species evolved? We found that the larvae (cyprids) of sponge-associated barnacles show a remarkably high level of interspecific variation compared with other barnacles. We document that variation in larval attachment devices are specifically related to properties of the surface on which they attach and metamorphose. Mapping of the larval and sponge surface features onto a molecular-based phylogeny showed that sponge symbiosis evolved separately at least three times within barnacles, with the same adaptive features being found in all larvae irrespective of phylogenetic relatedness. Furthermore, the metamorphosis of two species proceeded very differently, with one species remaining superficially on the host and developing a set of white calcareous structures, the other embedding itself into the live host tissue almost immediately after settlement. We argue that such a high degree of evolutionary flexibility of barnacle larvae played an important role in the successful evolution of complex symbiotic relationships in both coral reefs and other marine systems.

Funder

Russian Foundation for Basic Research

Danish Agency for Independent Research

Academia Sinica

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

Reference55 articles.

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