Discussion
Growing to a large adult size is likely to be advantageous to A. elegantissima for a number of reasons, including a lower chance of predation, a larger area for food capture, and an increased ability to deal with some abiotic stresses such as heat and desiccation because of a smaller surface area per volume ratio (Denny, 1988). The most important advantage, though, may be the increased reproductive output that larger size confers. Larger individuals can dedicate a larger volume of their body to gonadal tissue and produce more gametes, thus increasing their fitness. The assumption made here is that all larvae are equally likely to survive the planktonic stage; it is possible that smaller individuals produce a small number of more robust larvae that are more likely to survive the planktonic stage. It would be impossible, however, to track the thousands of larvae produced by a single anemone to their eventual recruitment site and estimate true fitness.
This study showed that larger individuals of A. elegantissima are not found as often in areas of more intense wave action. Intense wave action thus appears to decrease fitness in A. elegantissima. One possible reason for this is that larger individuals experience more mechanical stress from intense wave action due to drag. It is unlikely that an anemone firmly secured to the substrate would be dislodged by intense wave action, but it may tear or be ripped by strong waves and debris. Wave velocity may also play an important role in rate of food capture in A. elegantissima. The diet of A. elegantissima is largely comprised of small zooplankton such as copepods and amphipods that are washed away from surrounding areas (Sebens, 1982). Although an increase in average water velocity may increase zooplankton availability to A. elegantissima, this does not necessarily mean rates of food capture are higher. Food capture rates are actually inhibited in abnormally high flow velocities in a wide range (mussels, Cucumaria, Pseudocolochirus, crinoideans) of filter
feeders (Ackerman, 1999, Denny, 1988, Toonen, pers. comm.). Among these animals there is a fairly narrow range of flow velocities at which food capture is maximized. This may be the case with A. elegantissima as well. Sebens (1980) showed that asexual reproduction was inhibited in A. elegantissima if they were fed continuously. From this we can assume that individuals would be less likely to asexually divide, and be larger on average, in areas where food was being captured at higher rates. This would help explain why larger individuals are found primarily in relatively low flow environments.
Intense wave action is beneficial to sessile organisms such as A. elegantissima for a number of reasons; increasing wave action will positively influence oxygen uptake, waste removal, and spread of gametes. However, as described by Denny (1988), there is a “saturation point” for an organism at which any increase in wave velocity will not significantly affect these types of processes. As shown, there is a decrease in fitness above this “saturation point” for A. elegantissima. Thus, there is a narrow range of wave velocities that A. elegantissima is most fit in. In order to maximize fitness, it would suit A. elegantissima well to be able to detect differing wave velocities and respond by selecting a habitat that had wave velocities within this narrow range.
The results of my laboratory study show that individuals of A. elegantissima are indeed capable of detecting differing water velocities and respond by becoming more motile. Denny (1988) pointed out that organisms smaller than about 0.5 cm are largely unaffected by drag of wave action in the same way larger organisms are. This may help to explain why planula larvae of A. elegantissima are able to colonize mussel beds. At some size, the habitat of the mussel bed becomes unsuitable and juvenile anemones must colonize areas of the intertidal that are less exposed. There are several possible factors that might direct this movement including chemoreception, substrate texture, and perhaps wave velocities. Adult anemones may move as well to find areas of more suitable flow if local conditions change. Individuals appear to be unable to detect the direction that flow is coming from; they may rely on a temporal, rather than spatial, “sense” to direct movement. Simply put, an individual may keep moving until it finds a flow regime that it finds suitable. Future studies could focus on the ability of A. elegantissima to detect flow velocities and directions, and measures of fitness of entire colonies of A. elegantissima in the field relative to wave velocity.