Cleaning symbiosis


Cleaning symbiosis is a mutually beneficial association between individuals of two species, where one removes and eats parasites and other materials from the surface of the other. Cleaning symbiosis is well-known among marine fish, where some small species of cleaner fish, notably wrasses but also species in other genera, are specialised to feed almost exclusively by cleaning larger fish and other marine animals. Other cleaning symbioses exist between birds and mammals, and in other groups.
Cleaning behaviour was first described by the Greek historian Herodotus in about 420 BC, though his example appears to occur only rarely.
The role of cleaning symbioses has been debated by biologists for over thirty years. Some believe that cleaning represents selfless co-operation, essentially pure mutualism, increasing the fitness of both individuals. Others such as Robert Trivers hold that it illustrates mutual selfishness, reciprocal altruism. Others again believe that cleaning behaviour is simply one-sided exploitation, a form of parasitism.
Cheating, where either a cleaner sometimes harms its client, or a predatory species mimics a cleaner, also occurs. Predatory cheating is analogous to Batesian mimicry, as where a harmless hoverfly mimics a stinging wasp, though with the tables turned. Some genuine cleaner fish, such as gobies and wrasse, have the same colours and patterns, in an example of convergent evolution. Mutual resemblance among cleaner fish is analogous to Müllerian mimicry, as where stinging bees and wasps mimic each other.

History

In his Histories, the ancient Greek historian Herodotus wrote:
Herodotus thus claimed that Nile crocodiles had what would now be called a cleaning symbiosis with the bird he called the trochilus, possibly a sandpiper. In 1906 Henry Scherren quoted John Mason Cook, son of travel agent Thomas Cook, as reporting from Egypt that he had seen some spur-winged plovers approach a crocodile, which opened its jaws for them:
MacFarland and Reeder, reviewing the evidence, found that

A disputed relationship

Cleaning symbiosis is a relationship between a pair of animals of different species, involving the removal and subsequent ingestion of ectoparasites, diseased and injured tissue, and unwanted food items from the surface of the host organism by the cleaning organism. Its status has been debated by biologists, with viewpoints ranging from pure mutualism through to a form of exploitative parasitism by the cleaner.
Marine biologist Alexandra Grutter explains:

Selfless co-operation

Grutter and her colleague Robert Poulin, reviewing over thirty years of debate by biologists on cleaning symbioses, argue that "Cleaning symbioses may not be mutualistic associations but rather one-sided exploitation. However, one must then ask why no counter-adaptation has evolved in clients to free them from this exploitation. If clients are the puppets of cleaners, then the fitness consequences of being exploited must be small". They quote as an example of an early position, C. Limbaugh writing in 1961: "From the standpoint of the philosopher of biology, the extent of cleaning behavior in the ocean emphasizes the role of co-operation in nature as opposed to the tooth-and-claw struggle for existence".

Mutual selfishness

In 1971, mathematical biologist Robert Trivers wrote more carefully "Cleaner organisms and their hosts meet the preconditions for the evolution of reciprocally altruistic behavior. The host's altruism is to be explained as benefiting him because of the advantage of being able quickly and repeatedly to return to the same cleaner".

One-sided exploitation

By 1987 G. S. Losey wrote less optimistically "Cleaners are nothing but very clever behavioral parasites... that have taken advantage of the rewarding aspects of tactile stimulation, found in nearly all vertebrates." Poulin and Grutter remark that "Over the last few decades,... the opinion of scientists regarding cleaning symbioses has changed, from selfless cooperation, to a mutually beneficial interaction, and finally to a one-sided exploitation."

Biological range

Cleaning symbiosis is known from several groups of animals both in the sea and on land. Cleaners include fish, shrimps and birds; clients include a much wider range of fish, marine reptiles including turtles and iguanas, octopus, whales, and terrestrial mammals. Cleaning symbioses with reptile clients include fish cleaning the teeth of American crocodiles, geckos eating mosquitoes on Aldabra giant tortoises and scarlet crabs, and three species of Galapagos finches removing ticks from marine iguanas.
HabitatCleanerDescriptionClientImage
Freshwater lakes and streamsCrayfish worms Leech-like worms live on crayfish and feed on microorganisms that colonize crayfish gills and exoskeletonCrayfish
Indian Ocean coral reefsCleaner wrasse Small, longitudinally-striped, with blue; eats only ectoparasites at 'cleaning stations'Larger fish e.g. puffers, sweetlips, groupers
Western Atlantic coral reefsCleaning gobies Different species small, longitudinally-striped, with blue, showing convergent evolution; eat ectoparasites but also small preyLarger fish
Brackish water, South AsiaCichlid fish, orange chromide Eats ectoparasites; preys on eggs, larvaeCichlid fish, green chromide
Freshwater, Amazon basinJuvenile striped Raphael catfish Only juvenile is strongly striped and eats ectoparasitesTrahira -
Caribbean and Indo-Pacific coral reefsSpecies of cleaner shrimpEat ectoparasites at cleaning stations, scavenge; omnivorousFish of various species
Caribbean and Indo-Pacific coral reefsCrab Planes minutusEat ectoparasites while living on hostLoggerhead sea turtle
Pan-tropical coral reefs: Western Atlantic, PacificDecapod Stenopus hispidus Waves antennae to advertise service; eats parasites, fungi, dead tissueFish of various species; hawksbill sea turtle
African plains, savannaRed-billed oxpecker Eats blue ticks and brown ear ticks , blood: keeps skin wounds openLarge mammals, e.g. impala, rhinoceros, domestic cattle
Brazilian open countryWattled jacana, shiny cowbird, cattle tyrant, giant cowbird, yellow-headed caracara Ticks, horseflies, other parasitesCapybara
North American deserts, forests, etc.Species of pseudoscorpionsEat packrat ectoparasitesSpecies of packrat
Hawaii submerged lava platformCleaner fish, mostly yellow tang and golden eye surgeon fish Fish at cleaning stations forage on shells and skin of turtlesGreen sea turtle
Kenya and UgandaBanded mongooses Have been observed removing ticks and other parasitesWarthog

The best known cleaning symbioses are among marine fishes, where several species of small fish, notably of wrasse, are specialised in colour, pattern and behaviour as cleaners, providing a cleaning and ectoparasite removal service to larger, often predatory fish. Cleaner species, as shown in the table, vary widely in their degree of dependence on their clients. Some are essentially pure obligate symbionts like the cleaner wrasse; some are opportunistic or facultative symbionts, like the orange chromide or some cleaner shrimps; and some, like the oxpeckers, combine a little eating of parasites with taking of blood, their favoured food.

Mimicry among cleaner fish

Mutual mimicry among cleaner fish

Many cleaner fish in different families, such as the Caribbean neon goby and the Indo-Pacific cleaner wrasse share the distinctive combination of a long narrow body, a longitudinal stripe, a blue colour, and small size. "Convergent signalling among cleaners, using size, stripes and colour, should facilitate their recognition by fish clients." This is analogous to Müllerian mimicry where genuinely aposematic species mimic each other's warning colours.

Aggressive mimicry of cleaner fish by blennies

The sabre-toothed blenny is a predatory blenny, an aggressive mimic which accurately resembles the bluestreak cleaner wrasse, not only in colour and pattern, but also in the ritualised dance the cleaner wrasse makes when potential client fish swim nearby. However, instead of providing the cleaning service that it signals, it bites off pieces of healthy skin, scales and mucus from the host and then swims rapidly away to safety.
Type of mimicryModelMimicDupeModel-dupe relationshipDupe's expectationEffect
Batesian mimicryWaspHoverflyPredatory birdAntagonistic predator-preyMimic looks noxiousMimic dupes predator into not eating the mimic
Aggressive mimicryBluestreak cleaner wrasseSabre-toothed blennyClient fishCo-operative cleaner-clientMimic looks to be a cleanerMimic dupes client into allowing the mimic to bite

The effect of aggressive mimicry in a cleaning symbiosis is analogous to Batesian mimicry, where a harmless "edible mimetic species copies the warning signal of a noxious, aposematic model species, thereby gaining protection from predators". As in Batesian mimicry, the rate of successful attacks on cleaning clients by the bluestriped fangblenny, which like the sabre-toothed blenny mimic the bluestreak cleaner wrasse, is frequency-dependent, meaning that the mimicry is more effective when the cheating fangblenny is rare compared to the cleaner wrasse. The difference, however, is that the aggressive mimic is inserting itself into a co-operative relationship, whereas "Batesian mimics insert themselves into an antagonistic predator–prey interaction." The fangblenny has evolved an opioid-containing venom which dulls pain and lowers blood pressure, confusing the bitten host and giving the cheating mimic time to escape.