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Growth trajectories of corallites and ages of polyps in massive colonies of reef-building corals of the genus Porites
Authors:W M Darke  D J Barnes
Institution:(1) Australian Institute of Marine Science, PMB 3, MC, 4810 Townsville, Queensland, Australia
Abstract:Massive colonies of the reef-building coral genus Porites were collected at inshore, midshelf and shelf-edge reefs in the central section of the Great Barrier Reef in November 1987. These colonies were comprised of 4 species: P. lobata, P. lutea, P. solida and P. mayeri. X-radiographs made of skeletal slices cut from the skeletons displayed the annual density-banding pattern characteristic of massive corals, and appeared to show corallites within each slice. The average age of the 36 colonies was 41±12 yr (mean±SD). The images of corallites displayed by the X-radiographs were not images of actual corallites, but approximated the position and size of actual corallites. Consequently, X-radiographs provide information about the formation and growth trajectories of corallites, and about the history of the polyps which deposited the corallites. Individual corallites were always normal to the growth surface. The growth surface of the colonies became bumpy when they reached 50 to 80 mm in height and, as a result, corallites took on a fan-shaped arrangement within a bump. New corallites were initiated at the summit of each bump and grew upwards and outwards. Thus, growth of colonies resulted in corallites becoming increasingly displaced from the summit of a bump. The X-radiographs showed that corallite growth becomes occluded at the bottom of valleys between adjacent bumps. Corallite growth then stops and the associated polyps are probably resorbed. Annual density banding showed that the average age of polyps in these colonies was 2 to 3 yr, average life expectancy 5 yr, and that no polyp was likely to be older than 8 yr. Small but significant variations in polyp longevity between corals from different reefs were probably associated with significant differences in bumpiness of growth surfaces. Even in Porites colonies which have been growing for several centuries, polyp longevity is likely to be 5 yr.
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