نتایج جستجو برای: rugose corals

تعداد نتایج: 5358  

Dehghani , H., Fallah Mehrabadi , J., Fatemi, S.M.R., Ghavam Mostafavi , P.,

Reef-building coral harbor communities of photosynthetic taxa of the genus Symbiodinium (zooxanthellae). The genus Symbiodinium is currently classified into nine genetic clades (A–I). Various corals harbor different Symbiodinium clades; some show specificity to a single strain. Coral and their zooxanthellae are sensitive to environmental stresses. In the Persian Gulf, coral reefs are subject to...

2016
Amy Apprill Laura G Weber Alyson E Santoro

The diverse prokaryotic communities associated with reef-building corals may provide important ecological advantages to their threatened hosts. The consistency of relationships between corals and specific prokaryotes, however, is debated, and the locations where microbially mediated processes occur in the host are not resolved. Here, we examined how the prokaryotic associates of five common Car...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2011
Douglas B Rasher E Paige Stout Sebastian Engel Julia Kubanek Mark E Hay

During recent decades, many tropical reefs have transitioned from coral to macroalgal dominance. These community shifts increase the frequency of algal-coral interactions and may suppress coral recovery following both anthropogenic and natural disturbance. However, the extent to which macroalgae damage corals directly, the mechanisms involved, and the species specificity of algal-coral interact...

Journal: :Journal of applied microbiology 2008
J M Cervino F L Thompson B Gomez-Gil E A Lorence T J Goreau R L Hayes K B Winiarski-Cervino G W Smith K Hughen E Bartels

AIMS To determine the relationship between yellow band disease (YBD)-associated pathogenic bacteria found in both Caribbean and Indo-Pacific reefs, and the virulence of these pathogens. YBD is one of the most significant coral diseases of the tropics. MATERIALS AND RESULTS The consortium of four Vibrio species was isolated from YBD tissue on Indo-Pacific corals: Vibrio rotiferianus, Vibrio ha...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2016
Oren Levy Sarit Karako-Lampert Hiba Waldman Ben-Asher Didier Zoccola Gilles Pagès Christine Ferrier-Pagès

Corals acquire nutrients via the transfer of photosynthates by their endosymbionts (autotrophy), or via zooplankton predation by the animal (heterotrophy). During stress events, corals lose their endosymbionts, and undergo starvation, unless they increase their heterotrophic capacities. Molecular mechanisms by which heterotrophy sustains metabolism in stressed corals remain elusive. Here for th...

2006
Terence P. Hughes

This paper explores inter-specific variation in the density of coral skeletons. I present new data on the porosity of 7 species of reef-building scleractinians, and briefly review 20 previous studies on approximately 23 addihonal corals. Although the total number of species examined so far is still small, the review reveals a consistent pattern of skeletal density among different morphological ...

Journal: :Journal of Differential Equations 2003

2015
Verena Schoepf Michael Stat James L. Falter Malcolm T. McCulloch

Naturally extreme temperature environments can provide important insights into the processes underlying coral thermal tolerance. We determined the bleaching resistance of Acropora aspera and Dipsastraea sp. from both intertidal and subtidal environments of the naturally extreme Kimberley region in northwest Australia. Here tides of up to 10 m can cause aerial exposure of corals and temperatures...

2016
Christophe Vieira Olivier P. Thomas Gérald Culioli Grégory Genta-Jouve Fanny Houlbreque Julie Gaubert Olivier De Clerck Claude E. Payri

Allelopathy has been recently suggested as a mechanism by which macroalgae may outcompete corals in damaged reefs. Members of the brown algal genus Lobophora are commonly observed in close contact with scleractinian corals and have been considered responsible for negative effects of macroalgae to scleractinian corals. Recent field assays have suggested the potential role of chemical mediators i...

2016
Silvia Libro Steven V. Vollmer Frank Melzner

Coral reefs are declining worldwide due to multiple factors including rising sea surface temperature, ocean acidification, and disease outbreaks. Over the last 30 years, White Band Disease (WBD) alone has killed up to 95% of the Caribbean`s dominant shallow-water corals--the staghorn coral Acropora cervicornis and the elkhorn coral A. palmata. Both corals are now listed on the US Endangered Spe...

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