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A unique skeletal microstructure of the deep‐sea micrabaciid scleractinian corals
Authors:Katarzyna Janiszewska  Jaros?aw Stolarski  Karim Benzerara  Anders Meibom  Maciej Mazur  Marcelo V Kitahara  Stephen D Cairns
Institution:1. Institute of Paleobiology, Twarda, 00‐818 Warsaw, Poland;2. Institut de Minéralogie et de Physique des Milieux Condensés, UMR 7590, CNRS and IPGP Universités Paris 6 and 7. 140, rue de Lourmel, Paris 75015, France;3. Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Laboratoire de Minéralogie et Cosmochimie du Muséum (LMCM), UMR 7202, Case Postale 52, 61, rue Buffon, Paris 75005, France;4. Department of Chemistry, Laboratory of Electrochemistry, University of Warsaw, Warsaw 02‐093, Poland;5. ARC Centre of Excellence in Coral Reefs Studies and Coral Genomics Group, James Cook University (JCU), Townsville, Queensland, Australia;6. Department of Invertebrate Zoology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, District of Columbia, Washington, D.C. 20560
Abstract:Micrabaciids are solitary, exclusively azooxanthellate deep‐sea corals belonging to one of the deepest‐living (up to 5,000 m) scleractinian representatives. All modern micrabaciid taxa (genera: Letepsammia, Rhombopsammia, Stephanophyllia, Leptopenus) have a porous and often very fragile skeleton consisting of two main microstructural components known also from other scleractinians: rapid accretion deposits and thickening deposits. However, at the microstructural level, the skeletal organization of the micrabaciids is distinctly different from that of other scleractinians. Rapid accretion deposits consist of alternations of superimposed “microcrystalline” (micrometer‐sized aggregates of nodular nanodomains) and fibrous zones. In contrast to all shallow‐water and sympatric deep‐water corals so far described, the thickening deposits of micrabaciids are composed of irregular meshwork of short (1–2 μm) and extremely thin (ca. 100–300 nm) fibers organized into small, chip‐like bundles (ca. 1–2 μm thick). Longer axes of fiber bundles are usually subparallel to the skeletal surfaces and oriented variably in this plane. The unique microstructural organization of the micrabaciid skeleton is consistent with their monophyletic status based on macromorphological and molecular data, and points to a diversity of organic matrix‐mediated biomineralization strategies in Scleractinia. J. Morphol.,2011. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
Keywords:azooxanthellate scleractinian corals  biomineralization  microstructure  nanostructure
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