نتایج جستجو برای: acropora

تعداد نتایج: 1099  

2010
Shi Wang Lingling Zhang Eli Meyer Mikhail V. Matz

BACKGROUND Miniature inverted-repeat transposable elements (MITEs), which are common in eukaryotic genomes, are small non-coding elements that transpose by utilizing transposases encoded by autonomous transposons. Recent genome-wide analyses and cross-mobilization assays have greatly improved our knowledge on MITE proliferation, however, specific mechanisms for the origin and evolution of MITEs...

2009
A. H. Baird J. R. Guest

Mangubhai & Harrison (2008; Mar Ecol Prog Ser 360:85–96) documented spawning patterns in an equatorial assemblage of Acropora spp. in Kenya over a 2 yr period. They concluded that reproductive seasons are more protracted at low latitudes and that ‘mass spawning’ does not occur in equatorial regions, due to a breakdown in spawning synchrony among species. However, this interpretation hinges on t...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2008
David Abrego Karin E Ulstrup Bette L Willis Madeleine J H van Oppen

The impacts of warming seas on the frequency and severity of bleaching events are well documented, but the potential for different Symbiodinium types to enhance the physiological tolerance of reef corals is not well understood. Here we compare the functionality and physiological properties of juvenile corals when experimentally infected with one of two homologous Symbiodinium types and exposed ...

2013
Vianney Denis Mireille M. M. Guillaume Madeleine Goutx Stéphane de Palmas Julien Debreuil Andrew C. Baker Roxane K. Boonstra J. Henrich Bruggemann

Regeneration of artificially induced lesions was monitored in nubbins of the branching coral Acropora muricata at two reef-flat sites representing contrasting environments at Réunion Island (21°07'S, 55°32'E). Growth of these injured nubbins was examined in parallel, and compared to controls. Biochemical compositions of the holobiont and the zooxanthellae density were determined at the onset of...

2015
Chris T. Perry Gary N. Murphy Nicholas A. J. Graham Shaun K. Wilson Fraser A. Januchowski-Hartley Holly K. East

Climate-induced disturbances are contributing to rapid, global-scale changes in coral reef ecology. As a consequence, reef carbonate budgets are declining, threatening reef growth potential and thus capacity to track rising sea-levels. Whether disturbed reefs can recover their growth potential and how rapidly, are thus critical research questions. Here we address these questions by measuring th...

Journal: :Environmental advances 2022

Although knowledge on the diseases affecting corals has been accumulating exponentially since 2000s, even more effort is required to summarize and guide further investigation. Here, we used Web of Science database review 226 studies published, between 2000 2020, identify major geographic taxonomic gaps in literature, propose future directions for study coral diseases. We classified according oc...

2014
Tomihiko Higuchi Hiroyuki Fujimura Ikuko Yuyama Saki Harii Sylvain Agostini Tamotsu Oomori

Modern scleractinian coral skeletons are commonly composed of aragonite, the orthorhombic form of CaCO3. Under certain conditions, modern corals produce calcite as a secondary precipitate to fill pore space. However, coral construction of primary skeletons from calcite has yet to be demonstrated. We report a calcitic primary skeleton produced by the modern scleractinian coral Acropora tenuis. W...

Journal: :The Journal of heredity 2009
Shi Wang Lingling Zhang Mikhail Matz

Mining for microsatellites (also called simple sequence repeats [SSRs]) in public sequence databases of a common Indo-Pacific coral Acropora millepora identified 191 SSRs from 10 258 expressed sequence tag (EST) and 618 SSRs from 14 625 whole-genome shotgun (WGS) sequences. In contrast to other animals, trinucleotide repeats, rather than dinucleotide repeats, are dominant in the WGS-SSRs, and A...

Journal: :Marine environmental research 2009
M S Pratchett T J Schenk M Baine C Syms A H Baird

Population outbreaks of crown-of-thorns sea star (Acanthaster planci L.) remain one of the most significant biological disturbances on tropical coral reefs although the increasing attention given to other threats has greatly limited recent progress in understanding the cause and consequences of this phenomenon. In September 2005 dramatic increases in the abundance of A. planci were observed on ...

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