Scientists discover new type of deep-sea hunting
sin studying the plunderous ways of sea slugs, scientists have discovered a new way to catch a meal — a technique called kleptopredation.
As new research shows, sea slugs are the pirates of the seafloor, attacking prey in their post-meal malaise in order to steal the meal their target just consumed, UPI reported.
Trevor Willis, a senior lecturer at the University of Portsmouth, said, “This is very exciting, we have some great results here that rewrite the text book on the way these creatures forage and interact with their environment.”
Nudibranchs, a family of brightly colored sea slugs, snack on hydroid colonies, a coral-like super organism.
The colonies consist of a collection of individual polyps which capture and eat plankton and small crustaceans.
When researchers analyzed the feeding habits of the colorful sea slugs, they found the gastropods prefer to consume polyps that have recently eaten a healthy helping of zooplankton.
Willis added, “Effectively we have a sea slug living near the bottom of the ocean that is using another species as a fishing rod to provide access to plankton that it otherwise wouldn’t have.” The predation technique is new to biology. Willis added, “People may have heard of kleptoparasitic behavior — when one species takes food killed by another, like a pack of hyenas driving a lion from its kill for example.
“This is something else, where the predator consumes both its own prey and that which the prey has captured.”
Willis set out to study the consumption patterns of nudibranchs after he became intrigued by their specialization. By adopting such an exclusive diet, Willis was concerned the sea slugs could eat their way out of existence by depleting their sole source of nutrients.
But the latest research suggested hydroid polyps only make up a small percentage of the sea slug’s diet. Nudibranchs mostly eat zooplankton — zooplankton caught and consumed by hydroid polyps, of course.