Award: OCE-1929293

Award Title: Collaborative Research: Investigations into microbially mediated ecological diversification in sponges
Funding Source: NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE)
Program Manager: Daniel Thornhill

Outcomes Report

Ecological theory predicts that high biodiversity in crowded, nutrient-limited systems like coral reefs may be driven by niche partitioning. In these systems, the successful coexistence of species may therefore be facilitated by adaptations that allow individualspecies to exploit novel sources of nutrients. In sponge communities on Caribbean coral reefs, there is substantialspecificity in the abundance, diversity, and composition of microbial symbionts (microbiomes) across coexisting sponge species, and these symbiontsexpandthe metabolic capabilitiesof their hosts by allowing sponges to access novel nutrient pools.This project tested the hypothesis that these interactions allow host species to partition available sources of nutrients. To test this hypothesis, we conducted work in Panama and the Florida Keys that included in situ experiments to assess the removal of particulate (bacteria and phytoplankton) and dissolved (sugars and amino acids) organic matter and ex situ experiments to assess the capacity of sponge microbiomes to take up inorganic sources of carbon and nitrogen. Our results demonstrate that the ten most ecologically dominant sponges on Caribbean reefs each have unique contributions to the cycling of organic matter and nutrients on these reefs. The ability of these species to utilize unique resource pools is intimately linked to their interactions with microbial symbionts. These results contribute to our understanding of links between biodiversity (both in terms of microbial symbiont and sponge host) and ecosystem functioning on coral reefs and generate new hypotheses pertaining to the ecologicalsuccess of sponges on Caribbean reefs. This project also provided graduate and undergraduate students with field and lab experience and trained 11 international students in a field course in sponge ecology and taxonomy in Panama. Last Modified: 12/12/2024 Submitted by: ChristopherJFreeman
DatasetLatest Version DateCurrent State
Fluorescence dissolved organic matter (fDOM) analysis of inhalant and exhalent water samples from sponges studied at an artificial reef off the coast of the Florida Keys, USA in August 20212023-08-11Final no updates expected
Potential microplastic counts of 6 common Caribbean spong species collected June 21, 2019 in Bocas del Toro, Panama2025-02-12Data not available
16S microbiome metadata collected from shallow artificial reef sponges and seawater in the Florida Keys, USA from Apr 2021 to Aug 20212025-02-21Final with updates expected
Isotopic data from sponges collected in 2013 and 2014 from reefs in Honduras, Belize, Panama and the Florida Keys.2025-02-25Data not available
Microbiome data from sponges collected in 2013 and 2014 from reefs in Honduras, Belize, Panama and the Florida Keys.2025-02-25Data not available
NanoSIMS data from sponges collected in Summerland Key in Florida between July 27 - August 19, 20212025-02-26Data not available
Bulk isotope data from sponges collected in Summerland Key in Florida between July 27 - August 19, 20212025-02-26Data not available
Autotrophy, heterotrophy and niche partitioning in Caribbean sponges sampled June 9, 2019 on reef sites around Bocas del Toro Panama.2025-02-27Data not available
Literature review of sponge-microbe interactions on sixteen characteristics of 82 sponges. 2025-03-04Data not available
Potential microplastic sizes of 6 common Caribbean spong species collected June 21, 2019 in Bocas del Toro, Panama2025-03-05Data not available

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Principal Investigator: Christopher J. Freeman (College of Charleston)