key: cord-0037568-yew9kqwc authors: Di Camillo, Cristina Gioia; Bavestrello, Giorgio; Cerrano, Carlo; Gravili, Cinzia; Piraino, Stefano; Puce, Stefania; Boero, Ferdinando title: Hydroids (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa): A Neglected Component of Animal Forests date: 2017-03-20 journal: Marine Animal Forests DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-21012-4_11 sha: 322d32641c38d195d932860b57fc08cca9e5611e doc_id: 37568 cord_uid: yew9kqwc Hydroids, one of the dominant components of the zoobenthic communities, share comparable growth patterns with higher plants because of their modular body organization, high potential of asexual reproduction, and phenotypic plasticity. These features, together with the ability to enter dormancy to overcome unfavorable conditions, make hydroids successful organisms adaptable to a wide range of environmental scenarios. Depending on their wide range of shapes and sizes, hydroids form three-dimensional forests at different dimensional scales, establishing both trophic and non-trophic relationships with several other organisms, from virus to vertebrates. Despite numerous researches conducted to study the hydroid ecology, the putative importance of hydroids in structuring zoobenthic communities is underestimated. Here, information available about hydroid ecology is summarized, in order to emphasize the role of hydroids as forest formers, as well as their function in the bentho-pelagic coupling. Clonal animals, according to Jackson and Coates (1986) , have either uniserial or multiserial growth patterns. Uniserial colonies are also called "runners" and do not form large assemblages, whereas multiserial colonies perform lateral and distal growth and tend to persist, with the possibility of forming large assemblages. Multiserial colonies, hence, are able to form "forests" and behave as trees, whereas uniserial colonies are more similar to weeds. The two strategies are also used to distinguish guerrilla from phalanx species (Humphrey and Pyke 1998) . Philopatric colonies (Knowlton and Jackson 1993) can produce a high number of genetically identical colonies (each termed a ramet) that, together, form a genet: an assemblage of genetically identical ramets. This tendency is conducive to the formation of animal forests. The colonies of the Hydrozoa show highly diverse growth forms that cover both categories (Bouillon et al. 2006) . Small polyp colonies (usually less than 1 cm high) are reptant and tend either to grow on other organisms or to form "meadows," growing directly on primary substrates where they can play a certain ecological role in becoming habitats for other species. Small hydroids are mostly overlooked, being considered as mere epizoites. Consequently, very little information is available on the ecological traits of small hydroids and the role they play in both benthic and pelagic communities. Clytia hummelincki (Leloup, 1935) represents a case of meadow-forming hydroid . Large colonies (ranging from 10 cm to 1 m) grow on primary substrates and become substrate for other organisms, forming forests comparable in sizes and abundances to those of either algae or gorgonians, and likely play roles of habitat formers as those documented for anthozoan forests (Cerrano et al. 2010; Ponti et al. 2016; Valisano et al. 2016) . Hydroids are one of the main components of zoobenthic communities. At their relative dimensional scale, hydroids change the features of the geological habitat, becoming habitat formers by affecting water movement and light penetration and providing settling space, shelter, or food to several associated species, so enhancing local biodiversity. Moreover, hydroid forests release a consistent amount of planulae, medusoids, or medusae in the surrounding environment, contributing to benthopelagic coupling and affecting biogeochemical cycles Rossi et al. 2012) . The modular organization of hydroids gives them a high plasticity and a potentially unlimited growth (Marfenin 1997; Kosevich 2006) ; hence they can adapt their shape, growth strategies, trophic behavior, and reproductive strategies to a vast array of environmental conditions (Boero 1984; Gili and Hughes 1995; Bouillon et al. 2006) . Even if hydroid ecology is rather well known ( Fig. 1) , their putative importance in structuring zoobenthic communities is underestimated by benthic ecologists. In spite of several documented cases of hydroids as formers of benthic assemblages comparable to algal forests, in fact, the formal definition of habitats rarely gave them much importance. For the Mediterranean Sea, for example, in the list of habitats assembled by RAC-SPA (2006) , there is just a single item comprising all hydroid forests (i.e., facies with large hydrozoa), whereas each type of algal forests is carefully identified with the name of the main species; the same treatment is given to the Bryozoa. Fraschetti et al. (2008) proposed a rationale of benthic habitat classification that allows accommodating hydroid forests into the seasonal or even permanent habitat formers. One of the reasons why hydroids are neglected is that hydroid specialists contributed less than marine botanists to the formal definition of habitats, and this led to underappreciation of the role of these animals, in respect to algae. Furthermore, at least in the Mediterranean Sea, field activities are mostly carried out in the favorable season when algae dominate benthic assemblages and most hydroids are dormant, leading to underappreciation of their importance in structuring benthic communities. Analyzing papers focusing on hydroid ecology could help in understanding why hydroid ecological role is overlooked. From 1950 to today (Fig. 1) , most of the papers were published during the decade 1980-1989 (over 45 per year) ; the most explored topic is the study of interactions between hydroids and other organisms (up to about 20 papers per year). During the last years (2010) (2011) (2012) (2013) (2014) (2015) (2016) , there was an increasing interest in studying hydroids belonging to fouling communities, alien species, and effects of climate change on hydroid assemblages. Among the researches published in the last two decades, very few papers put in relation hydroid distribution and population dynamics with abiotic and/or biotic factors (Azzini et al. 2003; Ronowicz et al. 2008; Orejas et al. 2013; Di Camillo et al. 2012a; Rossi et al. 2012) . Similarly to what highlighted by Becerro (2008) regarding sponges, most of researches on hydroid ecology generally are descriptive and focus on one or few species, interesting a narrow readership. Lack of published quantitative data expressed in terms of biomass prevents estimation of the potential of hydrozoan forests in terms of trophic impact, food source, and reproductive output and does not allow the comparison with other animal forests or within the animal forests. Deciduous hydroids, typical of shallow waters at cold and temperate latitudes, range from less than 1 mm (many Campanulariids, Campanuliniids) to about 20 cm in height (i.e., several Eudendriids, Pennariids, Tubulariids, Aglaopheniids, etc.). In these seasonal species, hydranth resorption or shedding occurs in response to periodic adverse environmental conditions, followed by dormancy of remaining fragments of tissue (coenosarc) enclosed in stems or hydrorhizae acting as resting stages (Bouillon et al. 2006) . When environmental conditions become favorable again, the regeneration of the colonies takes place from the dormant tissue. Seasonality drives the succession of species with different ecological characteristics; consequently, winter and summer species may occupy the same Fig. 1 Trend of published papers per year from 1950 to 2016. Over 1,500 papers focusing on hydroid ecology were considered (Data extracted from BiblioHydro, Gravili et al. 2000) space, but in distinct temporal windows (Boero and Fresi 1986; Coma et al. 2000; Bavestrello et al. 2006; Puce et al. 2009 ). The duration of dormancy/ active phases can change along bathymetric or geographical ranges characteristic of each species. Deciduous forests undergo strong seasonal variations in their biomass in relation to fluctuation of an intricate mixture of abiotic/biotic factors (i.e., temperature, irradiance, salinity, sedimentation, oxygen concentration, food availability, space competition, predation). Further studies are needed to understand physiological processes triggering quiescence or renovation and to test the duration of dormancy in relation to different ranges of environmental constraints since research focused on a limited number of species (Boero 1994 for a review). Many studies on hydroid seasonality were conducted in the Mediterranean Sea. Boero and Fresi (1986) were the first to generalize a seasonal pattern of community structure in the Mediterranean benthos while giving paramount importance to hydroids, highlighting the importance of seasonal fluctuations in the composition of the sessile benthos, with a dominance of the algal component in the spring and summer and a prevalence of hydroids in the fall and winter. This was studied in detail for the dominant winter species Eudendrium glomeratum Picard, 1951 ) and later better formalized in general studies (e.g., Boero 1994; Coma et al. 2000) . Bavestrello et al. (2006) showed that, in the Mediterranean Sea, 50% of the species thrive in the winter, 30% in the summer, and only 20% tend to be always present. Because of their plasticity and fast growth, deciduous hydroid forests have a prominent role in shaping zoobenthos dynamics. A good example is supplied by the comparison of the different life strategies of Eudendrium racemosum (Cavolini, 1785) from different localities. At the Medes Islands (MI), E. racemosum is also constantly present (Rossi et al. 2012) , whereas it is sharply seasonal in the Adriatic Sea (AS), where temperatures are significantly lower in the winter (Di Camillo et al. 2012a) (Fig. 2) . The longer duration of the fertility period and the highest polyp production in the population from the AS are likely related to the conspicuous food availability of this area. The considerable food amounts ingested by the polyps from the AS (Di Camillo et al. 2012a) suggest that (i) the hydroid plays a role in energy cycling and in removing particles from the water column and that (ii) local trophic levels are a key factor regulating variations in biomass of this suspension feeder. Indeed, in the MI, the summer regression of the population of E. racemosum, as well as the low polyp production, is probably related to the summer food paucity (Coma et al. 2000; Rossi et al. 2012) . Moreover, in the MI, the hydroid growth could be limited in summer due to competition with algae, as occurring at other localities of the Western Mediterranean (Boero 1984; Boero and Fresi 1986; Rossi et al. 2012) . Under different local conditions, the life cycle patterns of Eudendrium racemosum can further differ from those described above: for example, in the Ligurian Sea, E. racemosum living on artificial substrates and in eutrophic conditions was observed all year round, while the population living on a natural rocky cliff was present in summer only (Azzini et al. 2003 ). These considerations highlight that studies on fast-growing suspension feeders are indispensable to understand how population dynamics mirror environmental pressures and that the natural variability of these phenomena is great. In tropical areas, seasonality is due to rainfalls, and biomass fluctuations are probably related to variations in food abundance during the wet and dry season (Boero 1994) . In Indonesian waters, the maximal density of hydroids coincides with the period of heavy rainfall and river inputs . However, most of the projects carried out in tropical waters focused on the census of marine organisms, while long-term monitoring programs are scant. Similar knowledge gaps are present at the poles, where a dark and ice-dominated season alternates with a long period of total darkness (Orejas et al. 2013) . Seasonal forests can regress as a result, for instance, of the impact of global warming on species of cold-water affinity, such as Eudendrium glomeratum in the Ligurian Sea ). The regression of seasonal species is usually given less importance than that of perennial species, such as those of gorgonians in the Ligurian Sea (Cerrano et al. 2000) . Seasonal species are preadapted to undergo long periods of adverse conditions with dormant phases but, nevertheless, if negative situations become permanent (e.g., with constantly higher temperatures than previous ones), species might become locally extinct. Perennial hydroids are always present in their erect forms (e.g., the calcareous Milleporidae and Stylasteridae) and are more common than seasonal species where variations in environmental conditions are small. Habitat stability allows enduring species to develop large and sturdy colonies and to reach considerable sizes ranging from 20 cm up to 2 m: for example, Plumularia elongata Billard, 1913, Solanderia spp., or Millepora spp. at tropics; Lytocarpia myriophyllum (Linnaeus, 1758) on soft bottoms; Errina spp., and Amphisbetia operculata (Linnaeus, 1758) on hard substrates from temperate regions (Table 1 , Figs. 3 and 4). Perennial hydroids can give rise to animal forests comparable to those formed by gorgonians. Those with calcified skeletons are probably slow growing, but their growth rates are poorly estimated (Lewis 2006) . During their theoretically unlimited life span, perennial hydroids host several taxa of sessile and vagile organisms, represent a food source for several animals, and, in their turn, likely collect great amounts of feeding particles from the water column. These forests undoubtedly have a significantbut little exploredrole in energy transfer from plankton to benthos Loss of their habitats would lead to decline or disappearance of the enduring hydroid forests and their ecosystem services, as observed for L. myriophyllum in Northern Ireland because of intense bottom trawling (Goodwin et al. 2011) . In Ireland and Great Britain, the hydroid is considered a priority species (Goodwin et al. 2011) , while, in the Mediterranean, surveys of L. myriophyllum should be Indeed, the extension of either perennial or seasonal hydroid forests has never been mapped as carefully as other benthic features, such as coralligenous formations or seagrass meadows. Phenology and distribution of enduring species should be known to evaluate their importance for ecosystem functioning and to plan conservation programs. Interactions with Other Organisms Hydroids can establish different kinds of symbiotic relationships with several organisms from viruses to vertebrates, and, due to their wide size range, they can be both hosts and epibionts. Hydroids increase habitat complexity and enhance biodiversity as demonstrated through the study of temporal variations in composition and biomass of the organisms associated to Tubularia indivisa Linnaeus, 1758 from the North Sea (Zintzen et al. 2008) . The biomass of most of the symbionts was positively correlated to that of the host, and the maximal epibiont density reached very high values (about 450,000 ind. m À2 ). Even if several papers describe the entire assemblage of fauna and flora associated to hydroids (e.g., Hughes 1975; Lagardère and Tardy 1980; Bavestrello et al. 1996; Genzano 2001; Zintzen et al. 2008; Meretta and Genzano 2015) , the majority of the available literature studies associations involving few taxa, such as endosymbiotic algae (29% of published papers, Fig. 5 ) and mollusks (19%). There are over 600 papers focusing on interactions between hydroids and other taxa, highlighting that hydroid forests represent a mosaic of microhabitats, exploitable by numerous and diversified organisms. The perisarc composition and the production of secondary metabolites probably affect the attractiveness of hydroid basibionts; moreover, the organic matter trapped by hydroid colonies may support detritus-feeder communities , whereas other organisms such as amphipods can use the inorganic fraction imprisoned under the hydrorhiza to build their burrows (Genzano 2001) . Even the smallest hydroids can host a dense microbiome, composed both of prokaryotic and eukaryotic symbionts (Fig. 6) . Stabili et al. (2006) found prokaryotic communities on the perisarcal exoskeleton of Aglaophenia octodonta Heller, 1868, while Östman (2000) and Di Camillo et al. (2012b) reported bacteria on the bare epidermis of Pennaria disticha Goldfuss, 1820, and Ectopleura crocea (L. Agassiz, 1862). Schuett and Doepke (2009) recorded microbes inside the tissues of Tubularia indivisa Linnaeus, 1758. Among eukaryotes, the microbiome includes diatoms, sessile ciliata such as Vorticella and suctorians (Tazioli and Di Camillo 2013) , foraminifera, and macroalgae . Millepora spp. and Aglaophenia cupressina Lamouroux, 1816, are the only large forest-forming hydroids with conspicuous presences in scleractinian-dominated shallow reefs. The fact that both species host zooxanthellae (Symbiodinium spp.) suggests that the success of these hydroids on the upper part of the reef could be linked to their ability to obtain part of their nutrition from autotrophic sources (Lewis 2006 ). On the other hand, many zooxanthellate hydroids (e.g., Hydra spp., Myrionema amboinense Pictet, 1893, Eudendrium moulouyensis Marques, Peña Cantero, Vervoort, 2000, Halecium nanum Alder, 1859) do have zooxanthellae but do not form forests. Large hydroids are basibionts for a conspicuous number of taxa due to (i) the large surface offered by their colonies; (ii) the high variety of microhabitats represented by the hydrorhiza, the proximal polysiphonic portions, and the thinner distal branches; (iii) the elevation from the substrate, allowing the settlement of acrophilous species; and (iv) in some case the stability over time of at least the elder and larger basal portions, where organisms are particularly abundant (Garcia et al. 2009; Hughes 1975 Hughes , 1977 . Some large hydroids such as Nemertesia antennina and Lytocarpia myriophyllum form a complex rootlike apparatus, which may be composed by several generations of hydrorhizae (Hughes 1977; Di Camillo et al. 2013) . In proximity of the substrate, the anchoring system accumulates sediments due to the reduced current speed (Hughes 1978) . This three-dimensional holdfast represents a perennial habitat for several organisms, such as those of meiofauna , sponges, pycnogonids, bryozoans (Hughes 1978) , or amphipods. The biomass of associated organisms may reduce in distal portions due to the possible presence of defensive/ cleaning zooids (Gili and Hughes 1995; Hughes 1978) or because of a higher turnover of the apical branches. Hydroid's colonies can be the primary substrate for the recruitment of other invertebrates, such as mussel's larvae (Standing 1976; Di Camillo et al. 2012a; Genzano et al. 2003) . Big colonies of Amphisbetia operculata (Linnaeus, 1758) and Plumularia setacea (Linnaeus, 1758) represent the unique filamentous structure in sublittoral outcrops from temperate southwestern Atlantic (Buenos Aires coast), and blue mussel spats use these colonies as primary substrata (Genzano et al. 2003) ; colonies of Symplectoscyphus subdichotomus (Kirchenpauer, 1884) are the main primary settlement substrate of scallop spats in fishing grounds in Argentine sea (Bremec et al. 2008) . Some examples of relationships between large hydroids and associated organisms are summarized in Table 1 . Millepora spp. form functional biogenic reefs positively influencing fish abundance and species richness, especially in scleractinian-poor Southwestern Atlantic (Coni et al. 2013; Lewis 2006; Pereira et al. 2012; Rogers et al. 2014) . Besides fish, Millepora forests were found in association with a rich epiand endofauna represented by crustaceans, echinoderms, mollusks, nemerteans, polychaetes, tunicates, and sipunculids (Cook et al. 1991; Garcia et al. 2009 Garcia et al. , 2010 Pérez and Gomes 2012) . In temperate waters from southwestern Atlantic Ocean, intertidal colonies of the Anthomedusan Ectopleura crocea (Agassiz, 1862) can form dense clumps that support many epizoical microcrustaceans. Colonies also trap sediments under their hydrorhizae where other sediment-associated fauna lives (Genzano 2001) . In sublittoral outcrops, two large Leptomedusan hydroid, P. setacea and A. operculata, represent the most abundant available substrata for numerous vagile and sessile organisms (Meretta and Genzano 2015) . Stylasterid corals enhance habitat complexity offering refuge, food, and a hard substrate to several vagile and sessile invertebrates (Braga-Henriques et al. 2011; Salvati et al. 2010; Pica et al. 2015) . Hydroid habitat formers do not give rise to large colonies and forests everywhere, suggesting that formation of forests occurs only where food availability can support their development. The experimental studies performed to define the trophic role of hydroids in marine communities (Table 2) show that hydroids can exploit large quantities of seston, contributing to control the secondary production in coastal waters . Zooplanktonic preys, eggs, merobenthic larvae, phytoplankton, bacteria, and detritus represent the preferential food items of hydroids. The prey composition and predation rates vary in relation to hydroid species, sizes of preys and hydranths (feeding polyps), characteristics of the study areas, temporal fluctuations of environmental parameters (such as temperature, salinity, current intensity), and biotic factors (i.e., predation and competition). Captures are related to the food availability, which can vary daily or seasonally ( Table 2 ). Predation rate is inversely correlated to digestion time (Coma et al. 1994) which, in its turn, is related to hydroid characteristics but also to environmental conditions (i.e., temperature and salinity, Kinne and Paffenhöfer 1965; Gili and Hughes 1995) . Besides the size, other features of the ingested preys can condition digestion times, such as the presence of stiff exoskeletons (Orejas et al. 2013) . Times required for digestion of some hydrozoans are compared in Table 3 . Different preys have diverse carbon contents; however, the total carbon intake (mg C m À2 day À1 ) of the considered hydroid species is comparable to that of other suspension feeders Table 1 ), suggesting that hydroids play a key role in energy transfer from the pelagic to the benthic realms (Coma et al. 1995 . In particular, hydroids forming large, multibranched colonies could have a great impact on seston since they have a number of feeding polyps much higher than small hydroid species. Large colonies of Lytocarpia myriophyllum from the Ligurian Sea have about 1,300,000 feeding polyps m À2 , that, applying the lowest feeding rate reported for a cnidarian (0.01 mg C polyp À1 day À1 , , could remove up to 13,000 mg C m À2 day À1 . Standing (1976) and Sutherland and Karlson (1977) showed that hydroids resist overgrowth when present in dense aggregations (forests) being able to prevent the settlement of competitors by feeding on their approaching larvae. This behavior contributed to the proposal of the inhibition model as one of the modes of community development (Connell and Slatyer 1977) and can explain the processes that lead to the establishment of hydroid forests: once established, the forests inhibit the settlement of other species by eating the larvae of potential competitors. The trophic role of hydroids with medusae is double since they predate both in the benthos and in the plankton. To our knowledge, the complete trophic role of a species with both polyps and medusae has never been studied in detail, accounting for both domains. Concerning trophic behavior, Miglietta et al. (2000) reviewed a vast array of strategies in the various hydroid species, ranging from passive filter feeding, with the outstretched tentacles used as a filter, to active feeding achieved by movement of the whole polyp in a "searching" pattern, to rhythmic tentacle contraction causing microcurrents that convey small prey toward the mouth. As it might have been expected, specific studies (Gili et al. 1996; Miglietta et al. 2000) showed that small polyps mostly eat small food items, usually protists, whereas large polyps catch larger prey, ranging from crustaceans to other planktonic and Gili et al. 1996 a Estimated applying the lowest capture rate calculated for cnidarians (0.01 mg C ind. À1 day À1 , from benthic prey. Miglietta et al. (2000) distinguish active filter feeders that produce microcurrents that draw food particles toward the mouth (e.g., Aglaophenia) and passive filter feeders that extend their tentacles and wait for prey (e.g., Tubularia). The subantarctic hydroid Silicularia rosea Meyen, 1834, from the intertidal communities of King George Island ingests above all benthic diatoms resuspended by tidal current. The hydroid rhythmically expands and contracts its tentacles in order to increase the flow of particles toward the mouth (Gili et al. 1996) . Some species with small hydranths such as Lytocarpia myriophyllum and Aglaophenia cupressina produce conspicuous amount of mucus probably acting as a trap of organic matter (Puce et al. 2002) . Barangé and Gili 1988 Hydroids hosting zooxanthellae (i.e., Myrionema spp., Eudendrium molouyensis, Millepora spp., Aglaophenia cupressina) probably adopt a mixotrophic strategy and exploit products of the photosynthesis in oligotrophic waters. Trophic strategies are finalized to optimize the hydroid reproductive effort: since the reproductive period overlaps, at least partially, with the higher food intake and the maximal colony size, it is hypothesizable that hydroids store the energy necessary to produce gametes or medusae (Rossi et al. 2012 and references therein). Thanks to their plasticity, hydroids can adapt the shape of their colonies to increase the feeding surface and to give rise to an efficient three-dimensional predation system (Gili and Hughes 1995; Rossi et al. 2012) . The reproductive patterns do have a major role in the persistence of perennial hydroid forests. Large polyp colonies with fixed gonophores such as the Eudendrium studied by Wasserthal and Wasserthal (1973) produce planulae that settle directly in the vicinity of the mother colony, so contributing to the persistence of the forest. Hughes (1977) observed similar patterns for Nemertesia. Furthermore, these large colonies do spend the adverse season as resting hydrorhizae and continue to occupy the substrate. showed that the forest-forming Eudendrium glomeratum has a mixed strategy, with new colonies deriving from planulae and old colonies that regenerate from the resting stolons. The life histories of most species, however, are unstudied, and further research is needed to substantiate these patterns. The presence of medusae, due to the high vagility of this life form, should have more opportunistic polyps, even though the medusa stage is present in most of the very specialized forms that live in strict symbiosis with other animals , whereas those associated with plants do not follow this rule. As other "animal forests," hydroid assemblages represent fragile and diverse systems that could suffer severe threats from direct and indirect impacts and for the lack of a clear responsibility for some human activities in coastal and offshore benthic systems (Rossi 2013) . As shown in Fig. 1 , researches on hydroids and environmental/anthropogenic stresses have been increasing. These papers highlight that the three-dimensional habitats formed by hydroids could be threatened from direct (bottom trawling, pollution, urban expansion, tourism, harvesting of precious corals, aquaculture, mining, introduction of alien species) and indirect (ocean acidification and global warming) anthropic impacts (Rossi 2013) . Bottom trawling, among fishing activities, is the most devastating practice for animal forests (Rossi 2013) , due to the destruction of the fragile species and the sediment compactness, leading to the simplification of the benthic ecosystems (Althaus et al. 2009; Clark et al. 2010; Rossi 2013) . Hydroids living on dredgeable soft substrates, such as Lytocarpia myriophyllum and Nemertesia spp., are vulnerable to the effects of mechanical disturbances. Up to now, the role of soft-bottom habitat formers received little attention despite they create secondary hard substrata (Hughes 1975 (Hughes , 1977 (Hughes , 1978 Ammons and Daly 2008; Cerrano et al. 2015; Di Camillo et al. 2013) . Global warming is leading to changing in the benthic domain (Boero and Bonsdorff 2007; Lejeusne et al. 2010) favoring the establishment of tropical nonindigenous species (Coll et al. 2010; Lejeusne et al. 2010 ) and leading to the regression or disappearance of autochthonous, cold-affinity species Rivetti et al. 2014; McCauley et al. 2015) . Analysis of records over time can provide "early warning signals of species" that may encounter higher probabilities of local extinction involving several mechanisms at different spatial and temporal scales (Gravili et al. , 2015 . According to Puce et al. (2009) and Gravili and Boero (2014) , in the Mediterraneran Sea, larger Halecium species (e.g., Halecium beanii, H. halecinum, H. labrosum) are regressing compared to smaller ones (e.g., Halecium petrosum, H. pusillum, and H. tenellum). Large-size Halecium species, in fact, can be considered as habitat modifiers that create wide marine forests maintaining and modifying habitats (Fraschetti et al. 2008; Piraino and Fanelli 1999; Piraino et al. 2002) . Ocean acidification could affect hydroid producing calcified skeletons, such as stylasterids and milleporids, or the partly calcified such as the Alaskan hydractiniid Schuchertinia antonii (Miglietta 2006) . Moreover, intensive aquaculture is responsible for composition changes of the animal forest by water eutrophication, pollution, introduction of invasive species with evident changes in the trophic chain, simplification of the ecosystems, and accumulation of sediments (Borja et al. 2009; Rossi 2013) . Some hydroid species are harvested for ornamental purposes, such as Sertularia argentea and Hydrallmania (Hancock et al. 1956 ); S. cupressina Linnaeus, 1758 (Wagler et al. 2009 ); or stylasterids (Cairns 2011) , with presumably negative consequences on their conservation status. Moreover, this state is worsened by the deficiency of clear legal rules in the management of marine communities (Rossi 2013) . Other hydroids take advantage from anthropic impacts, such as those able to proliferate on artificial or modified substrates (e.g., among the genera Clytia, Obelia, Ectopleura, and Pennaria) (Morri and Boero 1986) . Deciduous and enduring hydroid forests probably respond in different ways to the effects of the abovementioned threats. Seasonal hydroids, due to their fast growth, plasticity, and above all their ability to enter dormancy, could overcome temporal unfavorable environmental conditions (Di . Enduring forests formed by large, slow-growing hydroids could be more vulnerable to environmental changes , especially considering species producing calcified or strongly polysiphonic skeletons or those associated with zooxanthellae (Banaszak 2003) . The scientific literature on hydroids here reported clearly highlights a gap in supplying quantitative data, limiting the possibility to compare information on hydroids with those available for other suspension feeders, to evaluate the impact of hydroids on seston, to calculate energy budgets, and therefore to define their actual role in benthic-pelagic coupling. Moreover, most of studies focused above all on species easy to rear (i.e., Hydra spp.) or on shallow-water hydroids easy to study in situ. Since several species live in environments difficult and/or expensive to be explored, there are very few data available on cryptic, tropical, polar, and deep hydroids, suggesting that we have only a partial knowledge on hydroid ecology. Data on enduring speciesforming the largest hydroid forestsare still insufficient to understand their function in benthic communities and to assess their vulnerability to climate changes. Knowledge on ephemeral hydroids allows using them as indicators of several environmental conditions (Mergner 1987) . Long-term studies on hydroid diversity and life histories may allow to detect early signs of the effects of water warming and other environmental stresses or to pinpoint nonindigenous species, identifying variations in composition, abundance, and reproductive periods (Puce et al. 2009; Gravili 2016) . The importance given to algal canopies in the description of habitats and in the determination of conservation policies must be extended also to animals that, in the past, where named "zoophytes," since they have a similar structural role to that of algae as habitat formers, extending also at depths where algal growth is not optimal. 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PSZNI: Mar Ecol A conceptual framework for marine biodiversity and ecosystem functioning Zonation and evolution of a rocky bottom hydroid community Population dynamics of Eudendrium glomeratum (Cnidaria: Anthomedusae) on the Portofino Promontory Gelatinous plankton: irregularities rule the world (sometimes) Assessing the suitability of a range of benthic indices in the evaluation of environmental impact of fin and shellfish aquaculture located in sites across Europe An introduction to Hydrozoa. Mémoires du Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, 194. Paris: Publications Scientifiques du Muséum The association between a deep-sea gastropod Pedicularia sicula (Caenogastropoda: Pediculariidae) and its coral host Errina dabneyi (Hydrozoa: Stylasteridae) in the Azores Primary settlement substrate of scallop, Zygochlamys patagonica (King and Broderip, 1832) (Mollusca: Pectinidae) in fishing grounds in the Argentine Sea Global diversity of the Stylasteridae (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa: Athecatae) A catastrophic mass-mortality episode of gorgonians and other organisms in the Ligurian Sea (Northwestern Mediterranean), summer 1999 Gold coral (Savalia savaglia) and gorgonian forests enhance benthic biodiversity and ecosystem functioning in the mesophotic zone Do colonies of Lytocarpia myriophyllum L. 1758 (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa) affect the biochemical composition and the meiofaunal diversity of surrounding sediments? Feeding and reproduction in Precuthona peachi (Mollusca Nudibranchia) The ecology of seamounts: structure, function, and human impacts The biodiversity of the Mediterranean Sea: estimates, patterns, and threats Feeding and prey capture cycles in the aposymbiontic gorgonian Paramuricea clavata Trophic ecology of a benthic marine hydroid, Campanularia everta An energetic approach to the study of life-history traits of two modular colonial benthic invertebrates Prey capture by a benthic coral reef hydrozoan Seasonality in coastal benthic ecosystems Mechanisms of succession in natural communities and their role in community stability and organization An evaluation of the use of branching fire-corals (Millepora spp.) as refuge by reef fish in the Abrolhos Bank, eastern Brazil The symbiotic relationship between the hydrocoral Millepora dichotoma and the barnacle Savignium milleporum Spatial and temporal distribution in a tropical hydroid assemblage Association between Dentitheca habereri (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa) and two zoanthids Population dynamics of Eudendrium racemosum (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa) from the North Adriatic Sea Biodiversity of prokaryotic communities associated with the ectoderm of Ectopleura crocea (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa) Distribution, ecology and morphology of Lytocarpia myriophyllum (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa), a Mediterranean Sea habitat former to protect Mass mortality events in the NW Adriatic Sea: phase shift from slow-to fast-growing organisms How many habitats are there in the sea (and where Millepora alcicornis (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa) as substrate for benthic fauna Sipuncula associated with branching fire coral (Millepora alcicornis) in a marine protected area in Northeastern Brazil Associated fauna and sediment trapped by colonies of Tubularia crocea (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa) from the rocky intertidal of Mar del Plata Hydroid colonies as primary substrata for recruits of the mussel Mytilus edulis platensis front off Mar del Benthic suspension feeders: their paramount role in littoral marine food webs The ecology of marine benthic hydroids Benthic diatoms as the major food source in the sub-Antarctic marine hydroid Silicularia rosea The impact of small benthic passive suspension feeders in shallow marine ecosystems: the hydroids as an example. Zoologische verhandelingen Rathlin Island -a survey report from the nationally important marine features project Zoogeography of Hydrozoa: past, present and a look to the future Missing species among Mediterranean non-Siphonophoran Hydrozoa A bioregionalization of the genus Halecium (Hydrozoa: Haleciidae): sentinel taxon of the global warming? Thalassia Salentina -Proceedings of the 75th National Conference of the Unione Zoologica Italiana Clytia hummelincki (Hydroidomedusae: Leptomedusae) in the Mediterranean Sea Trends in hydromedusan research from 1911 to 1997 Hydrozoan species richness in the Mediterranean Sea: past and present Notes on the biology of Sertularia argentea L Extraordinary abundance of hydrocorals (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa, Stylasteridae) in shallow water of the Patagonian fjord region The distribution of epizoites on the hydroid Nemertesia antennina (L.) Aspects of the biology and life-history of Nemertesia antennina (L.) (Hydrozoa: Plumulariidae) Life-histories and abundance of epizoites of the hydroid Nemertesia antennina (L.) Demographic and growth responses of a guerrilla and a phalanx perennial grass in competitive mixtures Life cycles and evolution of clonal (modular) organisms Hydranth structure and digestion rate as a function of temperature and salinity in Clava multicornis (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa) Inbreeding and outbreeding in marine invertebrates Changes in the patterning of a hydroid colony Un faciès d'épifaune nouveau: le faciès à Ectopleura dumortieri (van Beneden) et Electra pilosa (Linné) faune associée, cartographie et évolution saissoniére Climate change effects on a miniature ocean: the highly diverse, highly impacted Mediterranean Sea Heterotrophy in corals: zooplankton predation by the hydrocoral Millepora complanata Biology and ecology of the hydrocoral Millepora on coral reefs Interactions and adaptation strategies of marine organisms Marine defaunation: animal loss in the global ocean Epibiont community variation on two morphologically different hydroid colonies: Amphisbetia operculata and Plumularia setacea (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa) Hydroids as indicator species of environmental factors on coral reefs Approaches to the ethology of hydroids and medusae (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa) Hydractinia antonii sp. nov.: a new, partially calcified hydractiniid (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa: Hydractiniidae) from Alaska Bruxelles: Office d'Etudes Marines et Atmosphériques ODEMA Feeding ecology and trophic impact of the hydroid Obelia dichotoma in the Kongsfjorden (Spitsbergen, Arctic) Feeding association between reef fishes and the fire coral Millepora spp.(Cnidaria: Hydrozoa) First record of the fireworm Hermodice carunculata (Annelida, Polychaeta) preying on colonies of the fire coral Millepora alcicornis (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa). Biota Neotropica Southern hemisphere deep-water stylasterid corals including a new species Keystone species: what are we talking about Variability of species' roles in marine communities: change of paradigms for conservation priorities The role of gorgonians on the diversity of vagile benthic fauna in Mediterranean rocky habitats Morpho-functional adapatations to suspension feeeding in Eudendrium (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa) Cnidaria: Hydrozoa) symbiotic radiation Long-term changes in hydroid (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa) assemblages: effect of Mediterranean warming? Mar Ecol (An Evolutionary Perspective) Classifcation of benthic marine habitat types for the Mediterranean region Global warming and mass mortalities of benthic invertebrates in the Mediterranean Sea Coral health rapid assessment in marginal reef sites Factors influencing hydroids (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa) biodiversity and distribution in Arctic kelp forest The destruction of the 'animal forests' in the oceans: towards an oversimplification of the benthic ecosystems Trophic impact of long-lived species indicated by population dynamics in the short-lived hydrozoan Eudendrium racemosum The population of Errina aspera (Hydrozoa: Stylasteridae) of the Messina Strait (Mediterranean Sea) A quantitative study of feeding of the colonies of Perigonimus megas (hydroidea, bougainvillidae) Fouling community structure: effects of the hydroid, Obelia dichotoma, on larval recruitment Development and stability of the fouling community at Beaufort, North Carolina Ecological and morphological characteristics of Ephelota gemmipara (Ciliophora, Suctoria), epibiontic on Eudendrium racemosum (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa) from the Adriatic Sea Temporal variability of sedimentation rates and mobile fauna inside and outside a gorgonian garden The fishery for whiteweed, Sertularia cupressina (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa), in the Wadden Sea, Germany: history and anthropogenic effects Ökologische Bedeuting der Schleimsekretion bei den Planula-Larven der Hydroidengattung Eudendrium Temporal variation of Tubularia indivisa (Cnidaria, Tubulariidae) and associated epizoites on artificial habitat communities in the North Sea