Ecosystem Effects
Unlike the bee, parasite and virus, some symbiotic relationships can form positive
feedback loops that can fortify the basis of an ecosystem instead of destroying
it. A good example of this is the positive feedback loop between seagrass, bivalves
and their sulphur oxidizing bacteria. In 2012, de Fouw et al. demonstrated that
Lucinidae bivalves play an important role in the health and abundance of
seagrass meadows. Seagrasses are an important costal marine ecosystem that provide
habitat, food and shelter for a vast array of marine and coastal animals and are
natural carbon sinks (Ugarelli et al. 2017).
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| A turtle eating seagrass (Lindgren 2013) |
Seagrasses evolved from terrestrial angiosperms approx. 100 million years
ago and mostly rely on the nitrogen fixing bacteria in their rhizosphere to neutralize
toxic sulfur buildup from degrading biomass (Ugarelli et al. 2017). However studies
have shown that the sulfur oxidizing activity of Lucinidae bivalve
symbionts further reduce sulfur build up complimenting seagrass growth and
preventing die offs (Ugarelli et al. 2017; Derksen-Hooijberg et al. 2017; Heide
et al. 2012). Bi-valves in the family Lucinidae share and obligatory
symbiotic mutualism with bacteria in their gills that use sulfur from broken
down biomass and oxygen to produce energy for the mollusc and itself (Heide et
al. 2012). By living together, the mollusc holobiont receives oxygen and
biomass from the seagrass while the bivalve reduces toxic sulfur build up for
the seagrass (Heide et al. 2012).
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| Lucinidae bivalves break down sulfur in exchange for oxygen. This mutualism can be disrupted in certain environments (de Fowe et al. 2016) |
Studies have shown that supplementing struggling seagrass ecosystems with
Lucinidae bivalves may help improve ecosystem resilience and may be a
useful conservation tool (de Fouw et al. 2018; Derksen-Hooijberg et al. 2017). Heide
et al. (2012) ran experiments with the seagrass Zostera noltii and the
bivalve Loripes lacteus while Derksen-Hooijberg et al. (2017) conducted
a similar experiment with a marshland mutualism between cordgrass Spartina alertniflora
and the mussel Geukensia demissa. Both studies found that the plants
grew better with their facultative mutualists then they did alone and that
sulfur levels were reduced. However, De Fowe et al. (2016) found that climate change may break down the mutualism between seagrass and bivalves. It is thought that the importance of sulfur oxidising bacteria in marine
ecosystems and nutrient cycles may be an overlooked factor that may help us to
conserve marine ecosystems (Burdoff et al. 2017).
For more information on seagrass meadows go here: http://www.oceanhealthindex.org/methodology/components/seagrass-area
Thank you for reading! 😊 Check back next week for more.


This is quite interesting, and a relationship that I was not aware of. I know it wasn’t the topic of discussion, but how do turtles feature in this relationship? Are they also mutualists?
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