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1.
In order to investigate nutritional interactions in the symbiotic scleractinian coral-zooxanthella association, fatty acids of the coral Galaxea fascicularis were analysed in two groups of cultured microcolonies. The first group was fed with Artemia sp., while the second group was starved. After an initial 1-month period during which both groups were subjected to the same normal light conditions (constant irradiance of 125 E·cm-2·s-1 and 14:10 h light:dark), a light cap was used to cover the aquarium and keep all the microcolonies in permanent darkness for 20 days. During the light phase of the experiment it was shown that the nutritional status lead to large variations in the percentage of saturated, mono-unsaturated and polyunsaturated fatty acids. Palmitic acid (C16:0) was the most abundant fatty acid in both groups. Important differences between fed and starved microcolonies occurred during the dark phase of the experiment. In the fed group the dark phase was characterized by a significant increase in polyunsaturated fatty acids. Particularly arachidonic acid (C20:4 n-6) became the most important fatty acid followed by docosatrienoic acid (C22:3 n-3). A slight increase in these two fatty acids was also found in the starved group but the bulk of polyunsaturated fatty acids was significantly decreased. In this group, palmitic acid remained the most important fatty acid while an increased concentration of cis-vaccenic acid (C18:1 n-7) was found at the end of the experiment. The increased concentration of cis-vaccenic acid might indicate that bacteria serve as a source of energy. While the number of zooxanthellae per milligram of protein and the chlorophyll a to protein ratio strongly decreased in the starved microcolonies immediately after the beginning of the dark period, the decrease in fed microcolonies was delayed for about 10 days. Furthermore, after 20 days of dark incubation the chlorophyll a to protein ratio was the same as measured at the beginning of the dark period. This suggests that in the dark the metabolic requirements of the zooxanthellae are in part met from the animal host through a heterotrophic mode of nutrition.Abbreviations CZ cultured zooxanthellae - FAME fatty acid methylester(s) - FDM fed dark microcolonies - FLM fed light microcolonies - MUFA monounsaturated fatty acid(s) - PUFA polyunsaturated fatty acid(s) - SDM starved dark microcolonies - SFA saturated fatty acids - SLM starved-light microcolonies - SW sea water - TFA total fatty acids  相似文献   

2.
In this first sequence analysis of ‘zooxanthellae’ (symbiotic algae of the genus Symbiodinium) in scleractinian corals in Africa, seven Kenyan species sampled in 2001–2002 were analysed by RFLP and sequencing of a PCR-amplified fragment of the LSU rRNA gene. Zooxanthellae of phylotypes A, C and D, all described previously in corals from other regions of the world, were detected. All sequences of phylotype D were identical, while phylotype C was variable, with 14 distinct sequences, seven of which clustered in a previously unreported subgroup of phylotype C, among the 22 samples. These data on the diversity of zooxanthellae in Kenyan corals 3–4 years after the 1998 bleaching event are of potential value for longitudinal studies of temporal changes in zooxanthella diversity in Kenyan corals, especially in relation to future large-scale bleaching episodes.  相似文献   

3.
Coral species in a similar habitat often show different bleaching susceptibilities. It is not understood which partner of coral-zooxanthellae complexes is responsible for differential stress susceptibility. Stress susceptibilities of in hospite and isolated zooxanthellae from five species of corals collected from shallow water in Okinawa were compared. To estimate stress susceptibility, we measured the maximum quantum yields (Fv/Fm) of in hospite and isolated zooxanthellae after 3-h exposure to either 28 or 34 °C at various light intensities and their recovery after 12 h under dim light at 26 °C. Significant reduction in photochemical efficiency (Fv/Fm) of photosystem II (PSII) was observed in in hospite zooxanthellae exposed to high light intensity (1000 μmol quanta m−2 s−1), while PSII activity of isolated zooxanthellae decreased significantly even at a lower light intensity (70 μmol quanta m−2 s−1). The recovery of the PSII activity after 12 h was incomplete in both in hospite and isolated zooxanthellae, indicating the presence of chronic photoinhibition. The stress susceptibility of isolated zooxanthellae was more variable among species than in hospite zooxanthellae. The order of stress susceptibility among the five coral species was different between in hospite and isolated zooxanthellae. The present results suggest that the host plays a significant role in determining bleaching susceptibility of corals, though zooxanthellae from different host have different stress susceptibilities.  相似文献   

4.
To investigate bleaching mechanisms in coral-zooxanthella symbiotic systems, it is important to study the cellular- or tissue-level responses of corals to stress. We established an experimental system to study the stress responses of coral cells using coral cell aggregates. Dissociated coral cells aggregate to form spherical bodies, which rotate by ciliary movement. These spherical bodies (tissue balls) stop rotating and disintegrate when exposed to a thermal stress. Tissue balls prepared from dissociated cells of Fungia sp. and Pavona divaricata were exposed to either elevated temperature (31 °C, with 25 °C as the control) or elevated temperature in the presence of exogenous antioxidants (ascorbic acid and catalase, or mannitol). The survival curves of tissue balls were markedly different between 31 and 25 °C. At 31 °C, most tissue balls disintegrated within 24 h, whereas at 25 °C, most tissue balls survived for more than 24 h. There was a negative correlation between survival time and the zooxanthella density of tissue balls at 31 °C, but no significant relationship was found at 25 °C. Antioxidants extended the survival time of tissue balls at high temperature, suggesting that zooxanthellae produce reactive oxygen species under stress. These results indicate that zooxanthellae produce harmful substances and damage coral cells under high-temperature stress. Tissue balls provide a good experimental system with which to study the effects of stress and various chemical reagents on corals cells.  相似文献   

5.
Genotypic characterization of Symbiodinium symbionts in hard corals has routinely involved coring, or the removal of branches or a piece of the coral colony. These methods can potentially underestimate the complexity of the Symbiodinium community structure and may produce lesions. This study demonstrates that microscale sampling of individual coral polyps provided sufficient DNA for identifying zooxanthellae clades by RFLP analyses, and subclades through the use of PCR amplification of the ITS-2 region of rDNA and denaturing-gradient gel electrophoresis. Using this technique it was possible to detect distinct ITS-2 types of Symbiodinium from two or three adjacent coral polyps. These methods can be used to intensely sample coral-symbiont population/communities while causing minimal damage. The effectiveness and fine scale capabilities of these methods were demonstrated by sampling and identifying phylotypes of Symbiodinium clades A, B, and C that co-reside within a single Montastraea faveolata colony.  相似文献   

6.
Symbiotic algae incubated in host tissue homogenate of the coral Plesiastrea versipora for 2 h in the light released at least four and a half times as much photosynthetically fixed carbon (range 13.8±3.1 to 158±9.5 nmol C/106 algae) as algae incubated in seawater (range 1.4±0.3 to 10.8±0.6 nmol C/106 algae) indicating the presence of ‘host release factor’. When algae were incubated in a low molecular weight fraction of homogenate containing partially purified ‘host release factor’ they also released more carbon (range 62.2±3.7 to 279±11.4 nmol C/106 algae) than algae incubated in seawater. This low molecular weight fraction contained free amino acids. We tested the hypothesis that the free amino acids in this fraction were responsible for ‘host release factor’ activity. Algae incubated in a mixture of free amino acids equivalent to those found in this fraction, released more fixed carbon (range 2.4±0.3 to 25.2±0.2 nmol C/106 algae) than algae incubated in seawater but in each experiment, release was much lower than when algae were incubated in host tissue homogenate. These data indicate that the stimulation of release of photosynthetically fixed carbon from the symbiotic algae of Plesiastrea versipora incubated in partially purified host release factor is not primarily due to the presence of free amino acids. We are continuing further studies to determine the exact nature of the active compound.  相似文献   

7.
Scleractinian corals may acquire Symbiodinium from their parents (vertically) or from the environment (horizontally). In the present study, adult colonies of the coral Acropora longicyathus from One Tree Island (OTI) on the southern Great Barrier Reef (Australia) acquired two distinct varieties of symbiotic dinoflagellates (Symbiodinium) from the environment. Adult colonies had either Symbiodinium from clade C (86.7%) or clade A (5.3%), or a mixture of both clades A and C (8.0% of all colonies). In contrast, all 10-day-old juveniles were associated with Symbiodinium from clade A, while 83-day-old colonies contained clades A, C and D even though they were growing at the same location. Symbiodinium from clade A were dominant in both 10- and 83-day-old juveniles (99 and 97% of all recruits, respectively), while clade D was also found in 31% of 83-day-old juveniles. Experimental manipulation also revealed that parental association (with clade A or C), or the location within the OTI reef, did not influence which clade of symbiont was acquired by juvenile corals. The differences between the genetic identity of populations of Symbiodinium resident in juveniles and adult A. longicyathus suggest that ontogenetic changes in the symbiosis may occur during the development of scleractinian corals. Whether or not these changes are due to host selective processes or differences in the physical environment associated with juvenile versus adult colonies remains to be determined.  相似文献   

8.
Fatty acid and sterol profiles allowed for clear discrimination betweentheraphidophyte genera Chattonella,Heterosigma, Fibrocapsa andOlisthodiscus, but exhibited little differentiation forindividual Chattonella species(C.marina, C. antiqua and C.subsalsa). Sterol and fatty acid profiles do not support theseparation of Chattonella antiqua and C.marina as distinct species. Ecophenotypic variations in lipidprofiles were also observed between Chattonella strainsfromdifferent geographic locations. Sterol signatures which may be useful aschemotaxonomic markers were: the absence of C27 sterols (cholesteroland 24-dihydrozymosterol) in Heterosigma akashiwo; thepresence of isofucosterol in Chattonella; and theoccurrence of brassicasterol, poriferasterol and fucosterol inOlisthodiscus luteus. High levels of eicosapentaenoic acid(EPA; 17-27% of fatty acids) were present in all raphidophyte species. Lipidcomposition correlated more closely to recent molecular classification ofraphidophytes than carotenoid pigments.  相似文献   

9.
Coral throughout the world are under threat. To save coral via cryopreservation methods, the Symbiodinium algae that live within many coral cells must also be considered. Coral juvenile must often take up these important cells from their surrounding water and when adult coral bleach, they lose their endosymbiotic algae and will die if they are not regained. The focus of this paper was to understand some of the cryo-physiology of the endosymbiotic algae, Symbiodinium, living within three species of Hawaiian coral, Fungia scutaria, Porites compressa and Pocillopora damicornis in Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii. Although cryopreservation of algae is common, the successful cryopreservation of these important coral endosymbionts is not common, and these species are often maintained in live serial cultures within stock centers worldwide. Freshly-extracted Symbiodinium were exposed to cryobiologically appropriate physiological stresses and their viability assessed with a Pulse Amplitude Fluorometer. Stresses included sensitivity to chilling temperatures, osmotic stress, and toxic effects of various concentrations and types of cryoprotectants (i.e., dimethyl sulfoxide, propylene glycol, glycerol and methanol). To determine the water and cryoprotectant permeabilities of Symbiodinium, uptake of radio-labeled glycerol and heavy water (D2O) were measured. The three different Symbiodinium subtypes studied demonstrated remarkable similarities in their morphology, sensitivity to cryoprotectants and permeability characteristics; however, they differed greatly in their sensitivity to hypo- and hyposmotic challenges and sensitivity to chilling, suggesting that standard slow freezing cryopreservation may not work well for all Symbiodinium. An appendix describes our H2O:D2O water exchange experiments and compares the diffusionally determined permeability with the two parameter model osmotic permeability.  相似文献   

10.
An experiment was conducted along the reefs off west Maui, Hawaii, during the summer of 2003 to monitor the spawning of the reef-building coral Montipora capitata and to determine the role of ocean currents in dispersing the larvae from the natal reef. Instruments documented the environmental forcing during the coral spawning season; drifters were deployed on three successive nights following direct observations of coral spawning. Both the timing and relative magnitude of the coral spawning were identifiable in acoustic backscatter data and correlated to plankton tow data. Each drifter track showed that the surface water containing coral eggs and planula larvae were transported rapidly offshore and not locally retained. Wind and current patterns during the previous year and during subsequent coral spawning events later in the summer were similar to those observed during the drifter releases. This suggests that the trajectories observed during the focused experiment are representative of the general pattern of larval dispersal off west Maui. These findings demonstrate the application of acoustic profilers for remotely imaging coral spawning and predicting their initial dispersal patterns.  相似文献   

11.
The close association between marine invertebrates, zooxanthellae, and numerous bacteria gives rise to the question of the identity of the actual producer of secondary metabolites. In fall of 2005, a widespread bleaching event occurred throughout the Caribbean Sea in which some colonies of the gorgonian coral Plexaurella fusifera bleached. This study investigated whether zooxanthellae play a key role in the biosynthesis of secondary metabolite terpenes from P. fusifera. The extent of bleaching was examined by chlorophyll A analysis and also by zooxanthellae isolation and cell counting. The bleached and unbleached colonies were found to contain similar concentrations of eremophilene as the major terpene, and both exhibited similar biosynthetic capability as evaluated by the transformation of [C(1)-(3)H]-farnesyl diphosphate to the sesquiterpenes. Differences in bacterial communities between the bleached and unbleached colonies were analyzed using molecular techniques, and preliminary indications are that unbleached and bleached corals are dominated by low G + C firmicutes and gammaproteobacteria, respectively. It therefore appears that terpene biosynthesis can proceed independently of the zooxanthellae in P. fusifera, suggesting that the coral or a bacterium is the biosynthetic source.  相似文献   

12.
In Mycobacterium phlei, fatty acid unsaturation increased with decreasing temperature. The 10-hexadecenoic acid content increased as the temperature was reduced from 35°C to 26–20°C. At lower temperatures tuberculostearic acid decreased while oleic and linoleic acids increased, the latter being found in M. phlei for the first time. Concomitantly palmitic acid content decreased, and the 6- and 9-hexadecenoic acids increased slightly on reducing the temperature from 35 to 10°C. Thus, down to 26–20°C palmitic acid was mainly replaced by 10-hexadecenoic acid. From this range down to 10°C, palmitic and tuberculostearic acids were replaced by oleic and linoleic acids. Consequently, fatty acid branching decreased and mean chain length increased, as the temperature was reduced. These observations support the view that regulation of membrane fatty acid composition is part of microbial temperature adaptation, and that themechanism behind the responses might be more complex than generally believed.Abbreviations ACP acyl carrier protein - FAS I (Type I) fatty acid synthetase I - FAS II (Type II) fatty acid synthetase II - MGLP methylglucose containing lipopolysaccharide - MMP methylmannose containning polysaccharide  相似文献   

13.
Scleractinian corals are known to suffer bleaching or loss of their symbiotic zooxanthellae under conditions of elevated seawater temperatures often associated with climate change (i.e. global warming). This can occur on a massive scale and has caused the decimation of reefs on a global basis. During the bleaching process, the expelled zooxanthellae suffer cell damage from heat stress, characterized by irreversible ultrastructural and physiological changes which are symptomatic of cell degeneration and death (called apoptosis) or necrosis. A question that remains unanswered, however, is whether the coral hosts themselves are sensitive to seawater temperatures, and, if so, to what degree? In a controlled experiment, we exposed corals Acropora hyacinthus (Dana, 1846) and Porites solida (Forskål, 1775) with their symbiotic zooxanthellae (Symbiodinium sp.) to temperatures of 28 °C (control), 30 °C, 32 °C, and 34 °C for 48 h and also to 36 °C for 12 h. We assessed coral and zooxanthellar cells in-situ for symptoms of apoptosis and necrosis using transmission electron microscopy (TEM), fluorescent microscopy (FM), and flow cytometry (FC). We found that the coral host cells in-situ exhibited, for the most part, little or no mortality from increased seawater temperatures. Damage to the coral hosts only occurred under conditions of prolonged exposure (≥ 12 h) at high temperatures (34 °C), or at exceptionally high temperatures (e.g. 36 °C). On the other hand, we found high levels of apoptosis and necrosis in the zooxanthellae in-situ under all treatment conditions of elevated seawater temperatures. We found that during bleaching, the host cells are not experiencing much mortality - but the zooxanthellae, even while still within the host, are. The host corals exhibit exaptation to accommodate temperatures as high as ≥ 34 °C. Temperature stress within these highly specific and coevolved symbiotic systems is derived not from host sensitivity to temperature, but from the symbiont's sensitivity and the loss of the coral's endosymbiotic partners.  相似文献   

14.
Corals inhabiting shallow back reef habitats are often simultaneously exposed to elevated seawater temperatures and high irradiance levels, conditions known to cause coral bleaching. Water flow in many tropical back reef systems is tidally influenced, resulting in semi-diurnal or diurnal flow patterns. Controlled experiments were conducted to test effects of semi-diurnally intermittent water flow on photoinhibition and bleaching of the corals Porites lobata and P. cylindrica kept at elevated seawater temperatures and different irradiance levels. All coral colonies were collected from a shallow back reef pool on Ofu Island, American Samoa. In the high irradiance experiments, photoinhibition and bleaching were less for both species in the intermittent high-low flow treatment than in the constant low flow treatment. In the low irradiance experiments, there were no differences in photoinhibition or bleaching for either species between the flow treatments, despite continuously elevated seawater temperatures. These results suggest that intermittent flow associated with semi-diurnal tides, and low irradiances caused by turbidity or shading, may reduce photoinhibition and bleaching of back reef corals during warming events.  相似文献   

15.
Zooxanthellae mitotic index (MI) and expulsion rates were measured in the facultatively symbiotic scleractinian Astrangia poculata during winter and summer off the southern New England coast, USA. While MI was significantly higher in summer than in winter, mean expulsion rates were comparable between seasons. Corals therefore appear to allow increases in symbiont density when symbiosis is advantageous during the warm season, followed by a net reduction during the cold season when zooxanthellae may draw resources from the coral. Given previous reports that photosynthesis in A. poculata symbionts does not occur below approximately 6°C, considerable zooxanthellae division at 3°C and in darkness suggests that zooxanthellae are heterotrophic at low seasonal temperatures. Finally, examination of expulsion as a function of zooxanthellae density revealed that corals with very low zooxanthellae densities export a significantly greater proportion of their symbionts, apparently allowing them to persist in a stable azooxanthellate state.  相似文献   

16.
Many cnidarians exist in an obligatory mutualism with dinoflagellates commonly called zooxanthellae. When these symbioses are stressed, zooxanthella densities often decrease (i.e., bleaching), resulting in reduced host fitness or mortality. Because zooxanthellae play a prominent role in the coloration of hosts, several analyses of reflected spectra from photographic images have been developed to quantify zooxanthella densities and serve as a proxy for invasive sampling methods. To date these techniques have not been compared. In this study, global information system (GIS) tools, commonly used with aerial and satellite images, and photographs of healthy and bleached sea anemones, Aiptasia pallida (Verrill), were used to compare these image analysis methods. Zooxanthella densities and chlorophyll-a concentrations were correlated with image brightness (i.e., digital number) in: the red, green, and blue bands (RGB); the average of the three RGB bands (RGB/3); intensity and saturation bands (IHS); and using a principal components analysis (PCA) of the RGB bands. RGB brightness correlations with zooxanthella densities and chlorophyll-a concentrations were highest using the blue band, followed by green, then red. Using any one band within RGB, however, restricts comparisons to similar color morphs. RGB/3, IHS or PCA transformations enable intra and inter-specific comparisons where colors may vary. Among these transformations, PCA and intensity had higher correlations, followed by RGB/3, then saturation. RGB/3 and IHS, unlike PCA, ignore the correlations between the three RGB bands, treating each pixel independently. PCA uses these correlations, and in doing so lessens the effects of heteroscedasticity in the data. In addition, the observed reciprocal relationship of intensity and saturation may serve as a standardized criterion for bleaching. Finally, this study demonstrates that GIS has broad interdisciplinary applications for spatial and spectral analyses from the individual colony to reef scale assessments.  相似文献   

17.
The abundance and distribution of free-living dinoflagellates in the genus Symbiodinium have important implications for the ecology of coral reefs, determining both the symbionts available to newly recruited corals and symbiont types available for uptake by adult corals during environmental stress. However, little is known about where symbiotic dinoflagellates reside outside the host, due to the difficulty of capturing and detecting unicellular organisms in the marine environment. This study presents a successful protocol for sampling Symbiodinium from both the benthos and the water column. Comparisons of two detection methods for enumerating Symbiodinium indicated that conventional microscope analysis is accurate and more efficient when estimating Symbiodinium densities in sediment samples, while an automated particle counter (FlowCAM) was more efficient in detecting cells in the water column where densities are low. Symbiodinium densities were found to be relatively high (1000–4000 cells/mL) in sediment samples and much lower (up to 80 cells/mL) in the water column, indicating that the free-living form resides mainly in the benthos. Symbiodinium densities were found to be highly variable spatially, differing significantly between two reef locations. Within sites, elevated densities of Symbiodinium along reef margins combined with significant decreases in densities one meter away from the reef, suggest that cells aggregate within the reef habitat.  相似文献   

18.
We have previously shown that the coral cell signal, host release factor (HRF) from the scleractinian coral Plesiastrea versipora (Lamarck) stimulates the release of glycerol from its symbiotic dinoflagellate, Symbiodinium sp. Glycerol is a precursor for algal triacylglycerol (TG) and starch, and we have previously observed that HRF reduces the amount of newly synthesized TG in Symbiodinium sp. We have now examined the effect of P. versipora HRF on starch synthesis in isolated Symbiodinium. HRF had no effect on starch synthesis after 2 h photosynthesis (16.3+/-3.0 microg starch per 10(6) algae) compared with algae in seawater (13.9+/-1.2 microg starch per 10(6) algae). However, after 4 h incubation in HRF, there was a reduction (0-76%), in the amount of newly synthesized starch which was correlated with the amount of HRF (10-76 microg/ml). Reducing algal synthesis of both TG and starch in parallel with stimulating glycerol release may provide a mechanism to regulate the population density of intracellular symbiotic algae while still ensuring the transfer of photosynthetically fixed carbon to the animal host in the form of glycerol.  相似文献   

19.
Borell EM  Bischof K 《Oecologia》2008,157(4):593-601
Thermal resistance of the coral-zooxanthellae symbiosis has been associated with chronic photoinhibition, increased antioxidant activity and protein repair involving high demands of nitrogen and energy. While the relative importance of heterotrophy as a source of nutrients and energy for cnidarian hosts, and as a means of nitrogen acquisition for their zooxanthellae, is well documented, the effect of feeding on the thermal sensitivity of the symbiotic association has been so far overlooked. Here we examine the effect of zooplankton feeding versus starvation on the bleaching susceptibility and photosynthetic activity of photosystem II (PSII) of zooxanthellae in the scleractinian coral Stylophora pistillata in response to thermal stress (daily temperature rises of 2-3 degrees C) over 10 days, employing pulse-amplitude-modulated chlorophyll fluorometry. Fed and starved corals displayed a decrease in daily maximum potential quantum yield (F (v)/F (m)) of PSII, effective quantum yield (F/F (m)') and relative electron transport rates over the course of 10 days. However after 10 days of exposure to elevated temperature, F (v)/F (m) of fed corals was still 50-70% higher than F (v)/F (m) of starved corals. Starved corals showed strong signs of chronic photoinhibition, which was reflected in a significant decline in nocturnal recovery rates of PSII relative to fed corals. This was paralleled by the progressive inability to dissipate excess excitation energy via non-photochemical quenching (NPQ). After 10 days, NPQ of starved corals had decreased by about 80% relative to fed corals. Feeding treatment had no significant effect on chlorophyll a and c (2) concentrations and zooxanthellae densities, but the mitotic indices were significantly lower in starved than in fed corals. Collectively the results indicate that exogenous food may reduce the photophysiological damage of zooxanthellae that typically leads to bleaching and could therefore play an important role in mediating the thermal resistance of some corals.  相似文献   

20.
Hermatypic (reef building) corals live in an environment characterized by high ambient levels of photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) and ultraviolet radiation (UVR). Photoadaptive mechanisms have evolved to protect the sensitive cell structures of the host coral and their photosynthetic, endosymbiotic zooxanthellae. Environmental stressors may destabilize the coral-zooxanthellae system resulting in the expulsion of zooxanthellae and/or loss of photosynthetic pigment within zooxanthellae, causing a condition known as bleaching. It is estimated that 1% of the world’s coral population is lost yearly, partly due to bleaching. Despite intensive research efforts, a single unified mechanism cannot explain this phenomenon. Although UVA and UVB cellular damage is well documented, UVC damage is rarely reported due to its almost complete absorption in the stratosphere. A small scale coral propagation system at the University of Maine was accidentally exposed to 15.5 h of UVC radiation (253.7 nm) from a G15T8 germicidal lamp, resulting in a cumulative surface irradiance of 8.39 × 104 J m−2. An experiment was designed to monitor the progression of UVC induced damage. Branch sections from affected scleractinian corals, Acropora yongei and Acropora formosa were submitted to histopathology to provide an historical record of tissue response. The death of gastrodermal cells and necrosis resulted in the release of intracellular zooxanthellae into the gastrovascular canals. Zooxanthellae were also injured as evidenced by pale coloration, increased vacuolization and loss of membrane integrity. The recovery of damaged coral tissue likely proceeds by re-epithelialization and zooxanthellae repopulation of gastrodermal cells by adjacent healthy tissue.  相似文献   

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