Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://repositorio.ufc.br/handle/riufc/75222
Type: Artigo de Periódico
Title: Linking host morphology and symbiont performance in octocorals
Authors: Rossi, Sergio
Schubert, Nadine
Brown, Darren
Soares, Marcelo de Oliveira
Grosso, Victoria ,
Rangel-Huerta, Emma
Maldonado, Ernesto
Keywords in Brazilian Portuguese : Espécie - Octocorals;Recifes de corais;Meio ambiente
Keywords in English : Specie - Octocorals;Coral reef;Enviroment
Issue Date: 2018
Publisher: Scientific Reports
Citation: ROSSI, Sergio; SCHUBERT, Nadine; BROWN, Darren; SOARES, Marcelo de Olievira; GROSSO, Victoria; RANGEL-HUERTA, Emma; MALDONADO, Ernesto. Linking host morphology and symbiont performance in octocorals. Scientific Reports, United States, v. 8, p. 1-10, 2018. Disponível em: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-018-31262-3. Acesso em: 11 dez. 2023
Abstract: Octocorals represent an important group in reef communities throughout the tropical seas and, like scleractinian corals, they can be found in symbiosis with the dinoflagellate Symbiodinium. However, while there is extensive research on this symbiosis and its benefits in scleractinians, research on octocorals has focused so far mainly on the host without addressing their symbiosis. Here, we characterized and compared the photophysiological features of nine Caribbean octocoral species with different colony morphologies (sea fan, plumes, whips and rods) and related key morphological features with their respective symbiont photobiology. Colony features (branch shape and thickness), as well as micromorphological features (polyp size, density), were found to be significantly correlated with symbiont performance. Sea fans and plumes, with thinner branches and smaller polyps, favor higher metabolic rates, compared to sea rods with thicker branches and larger polyps. Daily integrated photosynthesis to respiration ratios > 1 indicated that the autotrophic contribution to organisms’ energy demands was important in all species, but especially in sea whips. This information represents an important step towards a better understanding of octocoral physiology and its relationship to host morphology, and might also explain to some extent species distribution and susceptibility to environmental stress.
URI: http://repositorio.ufc.br/handle/riufc/75222
ISSN: 2332-2675
Author's Lattes: http://lattes.cnpq.br/0900817180710886
Access Rights: Acesso Aberto
Appears in Collections:LABOMAR - Artigos publicados em revistas científicas

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