Edmunds Peter J, Lenihan Hunter S
Department of Biology, California State University, Northridge, CA 91330-8303 USA.
Bren School of Environmental Science and Management, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106-5131 USA.
Mar Biol. 2010;157(4):887-897. doi: 10.1007/s00227-009-1372-1. Epub 2009 Dec 29.
In this study, juvenile colonies of massive spp. (a combination of and ) from the lagoon of Moorea (W 149°50', S 17°30') were damaged and exposed to contrasting conditions of temperature and flow to evaluate how damage and abiotic conditions interact to affect growth, physiological performance, and recovery. The experiment was conducted in April and May 2008 and consisted of two treatments in which corals were either undamaged (controls) or damaged through gouging of tissue and skeleton in a discrete spot mimicking the effects of corallivorous fishes that utilize an excavating feeding mode. The two groups of corals were incubated for 10 days in microcosms that crossed levels of temperature (26.7 and 29.6°C) and flow (6 and 21 cm s), and the response assessed as overall colony growth (change in weight), dark-adapted quantum yield of PSII (/), and healing of the gouged areas. The influence of damage on growth was affected by temperature, but not by flow. When averaged across flow treatments, damage promoted growth by 25% at 26.7°C, but caused a 25% inhibition at 29.6°C. The damage also affected / in a pattern that differed between flow speeds, with a 10% reduction at 6 cm s, but a 4% increase at 21 cm s. Regardless of damage, / at 21 cm s was 11% lower at 26.7°C than at 29.6°C, but was unaffected by temperature at 6 cm s. The lesions declined in area at similar rates (4-5% day) under all conditions, although the tissue within them regained a normal appearance most rapidly at 26.7°C and 6 cm s. These findings show that the response of poritid corals to sub-lethal damage is dependent partly on abiotic conditions, and they are consistent with the hypothesis that following damage, calcification and photosynthesis can compete for metabolites necessary for repair, with the outcome affected by flow-mediated mass transfer. These results may shed light upon the ways in which poritid corals respond to biting by certain corallivorous fishes.
在本研究中,来自莫雷阿岛泻湖(西经149°50′,南纬17°30′)的块状鹿角珊瑚属物种(鹿角珊瑚和蔷薇珊瑚的组合)的幼体群落受到损伤,并暴露于不同的温度和水流条件下,以评估损伤与非生物条件如何相互作用来影响生长、生理性能和恢复情况。该实验于2008年4月和5月进行,包括两种处理方式,即珊瑚要么未受损(对照组),要么通过在一个离散的点刮伤组织和骨骼来造成损伤,模拟采用挖掘式摄食模式的食珊瑚鱼类的影响。两组珊瑚在跨越温度(26.7和29.6°C)和水流(6和21厘米/秒)水平的微观环境中培养10天,并将总体群落生长(重量变化)、PSII的暗适应量子产率(Fv/Fm)和刮伤区域的愈合情况作为响应指标进行评估。损伤对生长的影响受温度影响,但不受水流影响。在水流处理的平均值中,损伤在26.7°C时促进生长25%,但在29.6°C时导致25%的抑制。损伤对Fv/Fm的影响在不同水流速度下呈现出不同的模式,在6厘米/秒时降低10%,但在21厘米/秒时增加4%。无论是否受损,在21厘米/秒时,26.7°C下的Fv/Fm比在(继续翻译剩余部分,因为字数限制,无法完整呈现)29.6°C时低11%,但在6厘米/秒时不受温度影响。在所有条件下,损伤区域的面积以相似的速率(每天4 - 5%)减小,尽管其中的组织在26.7°C和6厘米/秒时恢复正常外观的速度最快。这些发现表明,多孔珊瑚对亚致死损伤的响应部分取决于非生物条件,并且与以下假设一致:损伤后钙化和光合作用会竞争修复所需的代谢物,其结果受水流介导的物质传递影响。这些结果可能有助于揭示多孔珊瑚对某些食珊瑚鱼类啃咬的响应方式。