Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10773/24571
Title: The coral-killing sponge Terpios hoshinota invades Indonesia
Author: de Voogd, N. J.
Cleary, D. F. R.
Dekker, F.
Issue Date: 2013
Publisher: Springer Verlag
Abstract: The coral-killing sponge Terpios hoshinota recently expanded its range from the Pacific Island of Guam to the northwestern Pacific (Reimer et al. 2012). The black- colored sponge grows symbiotically with several cya- nobacteria and is known for occasional massive out- breaks where it smothers and kills corals and other sessile organisms (Ru ¨tzler and Muzik 1993). The so- called black disease has mainly been recorded in Taiwan and Japan, and more recently in the Great Barrier Reef (Fujii et al. 2012), but so far it has never been reported in the Indonesian archipelago. In 2011 and 2012, we intensively searched for Terpios at several Indonesian reefs. The sponge was not found in NE Kalimantan and North Sulawesi, and only a few small patches were observed in SW Sulawesi. It was, however, found overgrowing large areas of coral in the Thousand Is- lands, Java (Fig. 1a, b). Examination of the spicules and COI mitochondrial DNA sequences confirmed the identity of these specimens as T. hoshinota (data not shown). This sponge is known to thrive in polluted and stressed coral reefs (Plucer-Rosario 1987). The coral reefs of the Thousand Islands have been adversely af- fected by a number of disturbances over the past decades leaving them in a poor state. Importantly, T. hoshinota has a wider western distribution than previously thought, and it is important to monitor more areas due to the threat it poses to coral reefs.
Peer review: yes
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10773/24571
DOI: 10.1007/s00338-013-1030-4
ISSN: 0722-4028
Appears in Collections:CESAM - Artigos
DBio - Artigos

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