Balance of nature: illustrated (Introduction)

by David Turell @, Wednesday, December 21, 2016, 00:57 (2894 days ago) @ David Turell

What dead baby turtles leave behind on beaches lets other organisms live:

https://www.newscientist.com/article/2116580-baby-turtles-leave-behind-fleeting-oases-o...

"Baby turtles that fail to make it to the sea help fuel life on otherwise deserted sandy beaches in the tropics.

"The remains of turtle eggs that have been attacked by predators lead to a short pulse of life in what are normally deserts, boosting the abundance of small invertebrates fourfold, a study has found.

"These bursts peak seven days after the broken eggs become available and are all but gone in just 20 days.

“'This discovery affirms the role of sandy beaches as unique ecosystems,” says Ronel Nel at the Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University in South Africa, whose team studied the Maputaland beaches in the iSimangaliso Wetland Park, in Kwa-Zulu-Natal. “They are not deserts, as many seem to think.”

"'Traditionally, we think of beaches being important to the fate of turtles, but these findings highlight the importance of turtles to beaches, she says. Her team sampled sand in naturally predated nests and set up experiments to track changes in microscopic life, known as meiofauna, as compared with control sites nearby that didn’t have broken eggs.

"The boost in meiofauna was especially pronounced in the abundance of nematode worms. Their densities increased from a single worm to 10,000 worms per cubic centimetre in just 10 days. Other creatures that benefited included mites, springtails and insect larvae.

“'Meiofaunal organisms are vital contributors to ecosystem functions, including nutrient cycling and the provision of energy to higher trophic levels,” says Daniela Zeppilli, from the French Research Institute for the Exploitation of the Sea. They frequently feed on detritus and act as food for bigger organisms. “They are an often-neglected component of marine biodiversity.”

"But Zeppilli says it’s not clear that the seasonal boost in nutrients is necessarily a good thing for meiofaunal communities.

"She says that after an event such as a pulse of organic matter, a few species, often nematodes, can dominate over all other meiofauna. “So you have a lot of individuals, but very low diversity.”

"Nevertheless, such pulses of nutrients might play an important role in these often overlooked marine ecosystems.

“'This is interesting because sea turtles in general migrate between feeding grounds and breeding beaches, so energy is transferred between widely-separated ecosystems,” says John Davenport of the University College Cork, in Ireland.

"For example, he says, leatherbacks transfer energy from food, such as jellyfish, collected off Nova Scotia, in Canada, to clutches of eggs on nesting beaches in the Caribbean, thousands of kilometres away.

“'The authors have shown experimentally that smaller animals also benefit from this energy,” he says. “Sandy beaches are generally energy-poor systems, so the regular seasonal inputs of turtle eggs are important to the microscopic and macroscopic animals that live there.'”

Comment: A very clear example of how ecosystems work and provide food for all layers of life. Without these ecosystems food energy supplies would disappear and life would cease. Which raises an interesting question with no answer: what did initial life eat if it was rare as it must have been? Did it live on basic elements as some bacteria do?


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