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1.
Scleractinian corals experience a wide range of flow regimes which, coupled with colony morphology, can affect the ability of corals to capture zooplankton and other particulate materials. We used a field enclosure oriented parallel to prevailing oscillatory flow on the forereef at Discovery Bay, Jamaica, to investigate rates of zooplankton capture by corals of varying morphology and polyp size under realistic flow speeds. Experiments were carried out from 1989 to 1992. Particles (Artemia salina cysts) and naturally occurring zooplankton attracted into the enclosures were used as prey for the corals Madracis mirabilis (Duchassaing and Michelotti) (narrow branches, small polyps), Montastrea cavernosa (Linnaeus) (mounding, large polyps), and Porites porites (Pallas) (wide branches, small polyps). This design allowed corals to be used without removing them or their prey from the reef environment, and avoided contact of zooplankton with net surfaces. Flow speed had significant effects on capture rate for cysts (M. mirabilis), total zooplankton (M. mirabilis, M. cavernosa), and non-copepod zooplankton (M. mirabilis). Zooplankton prey capture increased with prey concentration for M. mirabilis and M. cavernosa, over a broad range of concentrations, indicating that saturation of the feeding response had not occurred until prey density was over 104 items m−3, a concentration at least an order of magnitude greater than the normal range of reef zooplankton concentrations. Location of cyst capture on coral surfaces was not uniform; for M. cavernosa, sides and tops of mounds captured most particles, and for P. porites, capture was greatest near branch tops, but was close to uniform for M. mirabilis branches in all flow conditions. The present study confirms laboratory flume results, and field results for other species, suggesting that many coral species experience particle flux and encounter rate limitations at low flow speeds, decreasing potential zooplankton capture rates. Received: 17 September 1996 / Accepted: 22 November 1997  相似文献   

2.
Capture of zooplankton by scleractinian corals has been noted for several species, yet quantitative information on rates of capture and differential capture by prey taxon has been lacking. We used field enclosures to examine prey capture for two coral species,Madracis mirabilis (Duchassaing and Michelotti) andMontastrea cavernosa (Linnaeus), on the north coast of Jamaica (Discovery Bay) in November 1989, February and March 1990, and January 1992.M. mirabilis has small polyps and a branching colony morphology (high surface/volume ratio), whereasM. cavernosa has large polyps and mounding colonies (low surface/volume ratio). Corals were isolated front potential prey, then were introduced into enclosures with enhanced zooplankton concentrations for 15- to 20-min feeding periods. Corals were fixed immediately after the experiment to prevent digestion, and coelenteron contents were examined for captured zooplankton. Plankton pumps were used to sample ambient zooplankton in the enclosures near the end of each run. Selectivity and capture rates were calculated for each prey taxon in each experiment; both indices were high for relatively uncommon large prey, and low for copepods, which were often the most common items in the plankton. Sizes of zooplankton captured by both species were generally larger than those available considering all prey taxa combined, but were almost the same for both coral species, even though the corals' polyp sizes are very different. This occurred primarily because small copepods, with low capture rates, dominated most plankton samples. For specific prey species, or group of species, there were few significant differences in size between the prey available and the prey captured.M. mirabilis, with small polyps, also captured far more prey per unit coral biomass than didM. cavernosa, with much larger polyps. We hypothesize that the large differences in capture rate of prey taxa are related to escape or avoidance behavior by those potential prey, and to the mechanics of capture, rather than to any selectivity by the corals.  相似文献   

3.
Fricke  H.  Meischner  D. 《Marine Biology》1985,88(2):175-187
Depth distribution, zonation pattern and growth morphology of 17 hermatypic and 4 ahermatypic coral species were investigated at eight different locations along the Bermuda platform with the research submersible GEO and by SCUBA diving in August–September 1983. Hermatypic coral growth occurs to a depth of 50 to 70 m, with a single Montastrea cavernosa growing at 78 m. Dominant forms in shallow-water coral communities are Diploria sp. and Porites astreoides, while M. cavernosa, Agaricia fragilis and Scolymia cubensis occur in deep-water associations below 60 m. Vertical visibilities (up to 178 m) and distribution of the photosynthetically active radiation revealed good light penetration values (1% level at about 100 m depth), which should favour hermatypic coral growth to a much greater depth than it actually occurs. Nor should the prevailing temperatures limit the depth of coral growth. Most deep-water hermatypes observed grow on remnants of Pleistocene reefs down to about 60 m. The vast areas of large massed rhodolith nodules below 50 to 60 m are unsuitable bottom for coral colonisation. Macroalgae growth seems to be the strongest factor controlling coral growth in deep water. Bermuda stony corals have a low growth form diversity. Various intraspecific morphs may occur at the same as well as at different depths, with a general trend towards flatter shapes with depth. Comparison with a similar study on Red Sea corals suggests that annual distribution of radiant energy on the most northern Atlantic reefs of Bermuda may be responsible for the occurrence of flat and cuplike growth forms in relatively shallow water, and for the shallower depth limits of hermatypic growth.  相似文献   

4.
Polyps of the corallimorpharian Rhodactis rhodostoma (Ehrenberg, 1934) form aggregations that monopolise patches of space on the shallow reef flats of some Red Sea coral reefs. Some of these polyps bear specialised bulbous marginal tentacles (BMTs) where they contact cnidarian competitors. BMTs differ from the normally filiform marginal tentacles (FMTs) of R. rhodostoma, and appear to develop from them. However, their morphogenesis and long-term impacts on spatial competition with reef corals are unknown. We experimentally induced contacts between R. rhodostoma polyps and colonies of the branching stony coral Acropora eurystoma on a shallow coral reef at Eilat, northern Red Sea. During the first 24 d of contact, the A. eurystoma colonies extruded mesenterial filaments that damaged the tissues of the corallimorpharian polyps. After 18 d,>90% of R. rhodostoma individuals had developed BMTs, which resulted in a reversal in the direction of competitive damage. During the subsequent 1.5 years of observation, the corallimorpharians maintained well-developed BMTs, unilaterally damaged the tissues of A. eurystoma, and in some cases moved onto the stony coral skeletons and partially overgrew them. BMTs developed from FMTs in a series of four distinct stages, accompanied by significant changes in their morphology, cnidom, and density of nematocysts. Isolated control polyps did not develop BMTs or show any signs of damage. In contrast, corallimorpharian polyps transplanted into contact with colonies of the massive stony coral Platygyra daedalea began to develop sporadic BMTs, but were unilaterally and severely damaged by the corals, and started to disappear within 21 d, after the corals developed sweeper tentacles. We conclude that long-term outcomes of competition between R. rhodostoma and reef-building corals depend largely on the relative aggressive reach of the competitive mechanisms developed by each species. As a consequence, this corallimorpharian is an intermediate competitor in the aggressive hierarchy among Indo-Pacific reef corals. This study confirms that R. rhodostoma polyps may actively damage and overgrow some stony corals, leading to the formation of an almost continuous blanket of polyps in large patches of some shallow reef flats. Received: 15 July 1998 / Accepted: 24 March 1999  相似文献   

5.
Seven fringing reef complexes were chosen along the leeward coast (west) of Barbados to study the effects of eutrophication processes upon the scleractinian coral assemblages. The structure of scleractinian coral communities was studied along an eutrophication gradient with a quantitative sampling method (line transect) in terms of species composition, zonation and diversity patterns. On the basis of these data the fringing reefs were divided into three ecological zones: back reef, reef flat, and spur and groove. Statistically discernible and biologically significant differences in scleractinian coral community structure, benthic algal cover and Diadema antillarum Philippi densities were recorded among the seven fringing reefs. High correlations between environmental variables and biotic patterns indicate that the effects of eutrophication processes (nutrient enrichment, sedimentation, turbidity, toxicity and bacterial activity) were directly and/or indirectly affecting the community structure of scleractinian coral assemblages. In general, species diversity was most sensitive in delineating among-reef, and among-zone, differences, which were attributed to intensification of eutrophication processes. Porites astreoides Lamarck, P. porites (Pallas), Siderastrea radians (Pallas), and Agaricia agaricites (Linnaeus) were the most abundant coral species in the polluted southern reefs. The absence and/or low abundance of coral species previously characterized as well adapted to high turbidity and sedimentation [i.e. Montastrea cavernosa Linnaeus, Meandrina meandrites (Linnaeus)] indicate that eutrophication processes may adversely affect these species. It is suggested that sediment rejection abilities, combined with feeding and reproductive strategies, are the primary biological processes of scleractinian corals through which eutrophication processes directly and/or indirectly affect the structure of coral communities.  相似文献   

6.
The corallimorpharian Rhodactis rhodostoma (Ehrenberg, 1934) forms aggregations that dominate patches on some coral reef flats in the Red Sea. The outcomes and mechanisms of competition for space between this corallimorpharian and other sessile organisms are poorly understood. Polyps of R. rhodostoma were observed to overgrow zoanthids, hydrozoan corals, sponges and encrusting macroalgae on a fringing reef at Eilat, northern Red Sea. R. rhodostoma polyps also damaged, and in some cases overgrew, reef-building corals in the families Poritidae, Acroporidae and Pocilloporidae, most of which form branching colonies with small polyps that are subordinate in coral competitive hierarchies. In contrast, most stony corals in the families Faviidae and Mussidae had standoff interactions with R. rhodostoma, in which they prevented the corallimorpharians from damaging them or approaching closer than 1 to 3 cm. The latter corals are ranked at the top of competitive hierarchies for Indo-Pacific corals, and they form massive colonies of large polyps which may develop aggressive organs termed sweeper tentacles. Some soft corals that exude allelopathic chemicals also avoided overgrowth by the corallimorpharians. Tentacles along the oral disk margin of R. rhodostoma polyps were swollen and bulbous during contacts with cnidarians. These bulbous marginal tentacles had significantly thicker ectoderm and a higher proportion of holotrichous nematocysts than did the normally filiform marginal tentacles of R. rhodostoma polyps. It is concluded that, on the reef flat at Eilat, this corallimorpharian damages and overgrows a variety of sessile competitors, including branching stony corals, via the application of specialised marginal tentacles filled with penetrating nematocysts. R. rhodostoma is an intermediate competitor in the aggressive hierarchy among Indo-Pacific Anthozoa, including the reef-building corals. Received: 1 July 1998 / Accepted: 24 March 1999  相似文献   

7.
The distribution and abundance of juvenile corals were examined at depths from 3 to 37 m on the reefs of Curaçao and Bonaire (Netherlands Antilles). Juveniles of Agaricia agaricites were most abundant (60.6%), followed by Helioseris cucullata (8.3%). The large massive corals such as Montastrea annularis, M. cavernosa and branched species such as Madracis mirabilis and Acropora palmata had few juveniles. This, combined with species characteristics, shows that these species employ very different life history strategies. In some species the abundance of juveniles over the reef paralleled that of larger colonies, but not for example in Agaricia agaricites. The composition of the coral community was apparently no direct function of juvenile abundance. A change in angle of settlement of A. agaricites juveniles with increasing depth, from vertical to horizontal surfaces, seems to reflect the preferred light intensity. We studied the survival of juvenile corals during a half-year period. One-third remained unharmed, one-third died or disappeared, and one-third was limited in growth by factors such as spatial competition. This was the same for all depths, but factors influencing survival varied with depth.  相似文献   

8.
Coral communities were examined from highly turbid near-shore marginal reefs of Abrolhos (Brazil) to test a paradigm previously developed from observations in clear water reefs; specifically, that coral photobiological properties follow a highly conserved linear relationship with optical depth (ζ) via preferential ‘non-photochemical’ over ‘photochemical’ dissipation of absorbed light energy. PAM flourometry in situ was used to examine the photobiology of the most dominant coral species throughout the platform surfaces and bases of Abrolhos’ characteristic ‘chapeir?es’ reef framework; however, none of the species consistently adhered to the ‘clear water paradigm’. PAM measurements further demonstrated that species conformed to two different strategies of non-photochemical energy dissipation: transient but relatively rapid for the two closely related endemic species (Mussismilia braziliensis and Mussismilia harttii) as opposed to more persistent for Montastrea cavernosa, Porites astreoides and Siderastrea stellata. Further experiments demonstrated that tolerance to anomalous stress amongst species did not correspond with the non-photochemical energy dissipation strategy present but was consistent with the relative dominance of species within the chapeir?es coral communities.  相似文献   

9.
The ctenophore Mnemiopsis leidyi A. Agassiz, 1865 is known to be eaten by the scyphomedusan Chrysaora quinquecirrha (Desor, 1948), which can control populations of ctenophores in the tributaries of Chesapeake Bay. In the summer of 1995, we videotaped interactions in large aquaria in order to determine whether M. leidyi was always captured after contact with medusae. Surprisingly, M. leidyi escaped in 97.2% of 143 contacts. The ctenophores increased swimming speed by an average of 300% immediately after contact with tentacles and 600% by mid-escape. When caught in the tentacles of C. quinquecirrha, the ctenophores frequently lost a portion of their body, which allowed them to escape. Lost parts regenerated within a few days. The striking ability of M. leidyi to escape from C. quinquecirrha may be critically important in maintaining ctenophore populations in situ. Received: 14 November 1996 / Accepted: 4 December 1996  相似文献   

10.
Two new hydromedusae collected in 1970 in the Eilat Bay (Red Sea) are here described as Allorathkea ankeli n. gen. n. sp. and Thamnostoma eilatensis n. sp. A. ankeli (Family Rathkeidae) is characterized by 8 radial canals, dichotomously branched oral arms, and solid marginal tentacles arranged in 8 groups. T. eilatensis (Family Bougainvilliidae) possesses 4 solitary marginal tentacles, 4 interradial gonads and dichotomously branched oral tentacles inserted above mouth-rim.  相似文献   

11.
It is speculated that differences in coral bleaching susceptibility may be influenced by the genotype of in hospite Symbiodinium and their differential responses to bleaching stressors. Photoinhibition of photosystem II (PSII), damage to the D1 (psbA) PSII reaction centre protein and production of reactive oxygen species by in hospite Symbiodinium are likely precursors of coral bleaching. In order to assess whether photorepair rates of in hospite Symbiodinium underlie the bleaching susceptibility of their hosts, photoinhibition (net and gross), photoprotection and photorepair rates were assessed in a bleaching-‘tolerant’ coral (P. astreoides) and a bleaching-‘sensitive’ coral (M. faveolata) using non-invasive fluorometric techniques and by blocking de novo synthesis of psbA. Previous studies using such techniques have demonstrated that in vitro Symbiodinium types ‘sensitive’ to bleaching stressors had reduced rates of photorepair relative to ‘tolerant’ Symbiodinum types. Our measurements demonstrated that Symbiodinium in the more bleaching tolerant P. astreoides had higher photorepair rates than Symbiodinium in M. faveolata. Higher repair rates in P. astreoides resulted in lower net photoinhibition relative to M. faveolata, where both corals exhibited similar susceptibility to photodamage (gross photoinhibition). Photoprotective mechanisms were observed in both corals; M. faveolata exhibited higher antennae-bed quenching than P. astreoides at low-light intensities, but at and above light-saturating intensities, which are different for each coral species, P. astreoides displayed more efficient non-photochemical quenching (Stern–Volmer quenching) of chlorophyll fluorescence than M. faveolata. Increased NPQ by P. astreoides at E/E k ≥ 1 was not driven by antennae-bed quenching. The ability of in hospite Symbiodinium in P. astreoides to mitigate the effects of photoinhibition under high light conditions compared with Symbiodinium in M. faveolata, and their high repair capacity following photoinhibition, may be a key factor to consider in future bleaching studies and may underlie the relative bleaching tolerance of P. astreoides compared to M. faveolata.  相似文献   

12.
13.
The burrowing bivalve Lithophaga curta is abundant (8 to 9 per 100 cm2) in the encrusting, hermatypic coral Montipora berryi at Enewetak; this is the first report of L. curta colonizing living coral. Conversely, larvae of M. berryi appear to settle in empty bivalve burrows, tentatively identified as those of L. curta, located in dead M. berryi. Several hypotheses are suggested on the adaptive significance of substrate selection by larvae of both species and an overall hypothesis of reciprocal recruitment, describing the dynamic aspects of this apparently co-evolved relationship, is proposed.  相似文献   

14.
Capnella gaboensis Verseveldt, 1977 was sampled at four sites in Sydney Harbour, during 1981–1984. This soft coral has an annual cycle of gonad development, with gonad number reaching a peak in May several weeks prior to spawning, and gonad size reaching a peak in May–June at spawning. The gonads develop during the warm months, and colonies spawn their gametes in late autumn and early winter. Gonad development is neither synchronous within colonies nor within populations, possibly reflecting the protracted nature of spawning. The histology of the developing oocytes and spermaries is described in detail C. gaboensis is a surface-brooder. The planulae are similar in structure to the larvae of other octocorals. The larvae are benthic, settling quickly upon suitable substratum, metamorphosing into polyps with mouths, tentacles and spicules, approximately one week after settling.  相似文献   

15.
Dynamics of a coral reef community at Tiao-Shi Reef, southern Taiwan were studied using permanent transects to examine coral recovery and successive cascades to collapse stage resulting from chronic anthropogenic impacts and typhoons. Three distinct zones were recognized within a relatively small study area (250 m across) formerly dominated by large stands of branching Acropora corals. The first zone still retains the dominance of branching Acropora corals, although they show a significant decreasing tendency. The second zone exhibits recovery with a significant increase in branching Montipora stellata, which is recruited and grows faster than branching Acropora corals. The third zone is occupied by anemone, Condylactis sp., and demonstrates a stable phase of coral deterioration without recovery. Such differences in coral reef community dynamics within a small spatial scale illustrate mosaic dynamics which have resulted from degradation of the water quality, patchy mortality of large branching Acropora thickets caused by typhoons, the rapid asexual fragmentation and growth of M. stellata making it a successful colonizer, and occupation by anemone, Condylactis sp., together with unstable remnants of dead Acropora rubbles have not allowed coral recruits to survive.  相似文献   

16.
Total body weight, tube length, abdomen weight and branchial crown weight of individualSpirobranchus giganteus (Pallas) living on four different coral species on the bank reef on the west coast of Barbados were investigated in 1986. Worms onDiploria strigosa were larger in all size parameters than those onMontastrea annularis, which were larger than those onMontastrea cavernosa, which were larger than those onPorites porites. The differences between worms onM. annularis andM. cavernosa were not significant. Variation in worm size on the different corals could result from variation in mortality and/or variation in growth. Whichever the case, larger worms may have higher lifetime reproductive success. Abdomen weight is an index of gamete production inS. giganteus, and increases with increasing body weight for worms on all corals. Moreover, larger worms do not have lower abdomen weight at a given body size than smaller worms. This may imply that faster growth does not reduce gamete production at body size. The coral species on which worms are largest are those most preferred by worm larvae in the laboratory and most heavily colonised by adult worms in the field. The results suggest adaptive habitat selection by planktonic larvae ofS. giganteus.  相似文献   

17.
D. S. Stoner 《Marine Biology》1994,121(2):319-326
The rate at which larvae successfully recruit into communities of marine benthic invertebrates is partially dependent upon how well larvae avoid benthic predators and settle on appropriate substrata. Therefore, to be able to predict recruitment success, information is needed on how larvae search for settlement sites, whether larvae preferentially settle on certain substrata, and the extent to which there are adequate cues for larvae to find these substrata. This article describes how larvae of the colonial ascidian Diplosoma similis find settlement sites on a coral reef. Direct field observations of larval settlement were made on a fringing reef in Kaneohe Bay, Oahu, Hawaii, between September 1985 and April 1986. A comparison of the substrata that larvae contacted prior to settlement relative to the percentage cover of these substrata on the study reef suggests that larvae are using a non-contact mode of substratum identification to locate suitable settlement sites. This mode of substratum identification allowed 74% of larvae to evade predation by benthic organisms who would otherwise have eaten larvae if they had been contacted. Of those larvae that evaded predation, 88% subsequently settled on the same two substrata upon which most adults are found (dead coral or the green alga Dictyosphaeria cavernosa). This pattern of settlement was probably a result of active selection, since the two substrata cover only 14.4% of the reef's surface and currents had little effect on the direction in which larvae swam. An important contributing factor to the high success rate of larval settlement on suitable substrata was the lack of any temporal decay in substratum preference. It is concluded that for Diplosoma similis larval supply is a sufficient predictor of larval settlement rate. However, for marine invertebrates whose larvae are passively dispersed and exhibit a greater temporal decay in substratum preference, larval settlement should generally have a greater dependency on spatial variation in the abundance of benthic predators and suitable substrata.  相似文献   

18.
Pocillopora damicornis (Linnaeus) and Montipora verrucosa (Lamarck) were collected from Hawaiian reefs. In two experiments (September 1979-January 1980: ca. 4 mo; August-October 1980; ca. 2 mo), these reef corals were grown under sunlight passed through filters producing light fields of similar quantum flux but different spectral composition. In vitro cultures of symbiotic zooxanthellae (Symbiodinium microadriaticum Freudenthal) from M. verrucosa were cultured under similar conditions for 15 d. Blue or white light promoted more coral skeletal growth than green or red light. In both coral species, blue light increased the total amount of chlorophyll a of the coral-zooxanthellae association. In the perforate species, M. verrucosa, the pigment concentration was elevated by an increase in the density of zooxanthellae, but the pigment concentrations per algal cell remained unchanged; in the non-perforate species, P. damicornis, it appears that pigment concentration was elevated by an increase in pigment per algal cell, and not by an increase in density of zooxanthellae. The sunloving reef-flat coral P. damicornis did not grow as rapidly as the shade-species M. verrucosa at the low quantum flux (about 10% sunlight) provided by the experimental treatments. The in vitro cultures of zooxanthellae from M. verrucosa exhibited growth rates in light of altered spectral quality that correlated with the responses of the host coral species: blue and white light supported significantly greater growth than green light, and red light resulted in the lowest growth rate.Contribution No. 678 of the Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology  相似文献   

19.
During daytime Plerogyra sinuosa Dana displays globular expandable tentacles (bubbles) which foster the photosynthetic ability of the coral. Adaptational responses of this coral to different depths (5–25 m) and light conditions were investigated by photosynthetic pigment analysis, insitu measurements of oxygen production, transplantation and shading experiments. Pigment concentrations per unit tissue dry weight were variable, but unrelated to depth. Pigment concentrations per zooxanthellae cell remained constant and bubble size increased with depth. Light intensity at 25 m was 20 to 25% of the 5-m value, but daily integrated rates of photosynthesis were 65% of the 5-m rates, indicating a higher light utilization efficiency in deeper corals. Coral heads transplanted from 25 to 5 m died within 20 d if not protected against UV-radiation, but corals transplanted from 5 to 25 m acclimatized to the new light condition. Photosynthetic oxygen production and bubble size increased in shaded, sun-adapted corals within 60 min and decreased in sun-exposed, shade-adapted corals. The variable bubble size is interpreted as an adaptational mechanism to optimize light exposure of zooxanthellae.  相似文献   

20.
The associated echinoderm fauna of 125 living heads of massive microatolls of Porites spp., branched heads of Porites nigrescens Dana and small, densely packed heads of the hydrocoral Millepora exacea Forskål of a shallow sublittoral lagoon flat at Aldabra Atoll, Seychelles was examined. The weight and number of echinoderms increased with coral size in all cases. The microatolls were the largest coral heads and sheltered the most diverse, underlying echinoderm cryptofauna comprising the largest bodied species, regardless of class or family. The infauna in heads of P. nigrescens was less diverse and smaller bodied than the echinoderms under microatolls. Only with P. nigrescens did species number increase with increasing coral size. Heads of M. exacea were the smallest and provided a habitat of compact interstitial spaces for the most depauperate, smallest bodied infauna which included juveniles of larger species. Ophiuroids dominated the coral-associated echinoderm faunas whereas larger bodied classes, such as echinoids and holothuroids, were less well represented. Large bodied ophiuroids such as certain ophiodermatids occurred only under microatolls, whereas the usually small bodied ophiotrichids dominated in the heads of M. exacea. The generally ubiquitous ophiocomids were well represented in, or under all corals. Heads of M. exacea could be nursery areas for recently metamorphosed juvenile ophiuroids and echinoids which, as they grow, seek shelter in corals with larger interstitial spaces such as P. nigrescens. Significant interspecific ophiuroid associations were related to space availability for larger species under microatolls and in heads of P. nigrescens. The possibility of microhabitat partitioning in corals among some ophiuroids is suggested.  相似文献   

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