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Calcification and associated physiological parameters during a stress event in the scleractinian coral Stylophora pistillata

Calcification and associated physiological parameters during a stress event in the scleractinian coral Stylophora pistillata
Calcification and associated physiological parameters during a stress event in the scleractinian coral Stylophora pistillata
High calcification rates observed in reef coral organisms are due to the symbiotic relationship established between scleractinian corals and their photosynthetic dinoflagellates, commonly called zooxanthellae. Zooxanthellae are known to enhance calcification in the light, a process referred as "light-enhanced calcification". The disruption of the relationship between corals and their zooxanthellae leads to bleaching. Bleaching is one of the major causes of the present decline of coral reefs related to climate change and anthropogenic activities. In our aquaria, corals experienced a chemical pollution leading to bleaching and ending with the death of corals. During the time course of this bleaching event, we measured multiple parameters and could evidence four major consecutive steps: 1) at month 1 (January 2005), the stress affected primarily the photosystem II machinery of zooxanthellae resulting in an immediate decrease of photosystem II efficiency, 2) at month 2, the stress affected the photosynthetic production of O2 by zooxanthellae and the rate of light calcification, 3) at month 3, there was a decrease in both light and dark calcification rates, the appearance of the first oxidative damage in the zooxanthellae, the disruption of symbiosis, 4) and finally the death of corals at month 6.
1095-6433
29-36
Moya, Aurélie
eba312aa-51d3-4ca8-89d5-776378ebd70e
Ferrier-Pagès, Christine
fd5f2d2f-82a0-43cb-ae0a-3908d3a2106e
Furla, Paola
d3e7b181-371a-4a7a-8749-594e704d10d7
Richier, Sophie
0fc0b375-6918-4c06-9d6f-229f6c4046ca
Tambutté, Eric
c082a9a0-6cc0-4fc0-a651-ea5dd1d5f2a6
Allemand, Denis
a9a9145a-9129-4827-83ae-f204d180d945
Tambutté, Sylvie
dd19042e-d32b-4894-93e0-14379f480d93
Moya, Aurélie
eba312aa-51d3-4ca8-89d5-776378ebd70e
Ferrier-Pagès, Christine
fd5f2d2f-82a0-43cb-ae0a-3908d3a2106e
Furla, Paola
d3e7b181-371a-4a7a-8749-594e704d10d7
Richier, Sophie
0fc0b375-6918-4c06-9d6f-229f6c4046ca
Tambutté, Eric
c082a9a0-6cc0-4fc0-a651-ea5dd1d5f2a6
Allemand, Denis
a9a9145a-9129-4827-83ae-f204d180d945
Tambutté, Sylvie
dd19042e-d32b-4894-93e0-14379f480d93

Moya, Aurélie, Ferrier-Pagès, Christine, Furla, Paola, Richier, Sophie, Tambutté, Eric, Allemand, Denis and Tambutté, Sylvie (2008) Calcification and associated physiological parameters during a stress event in the scleractinian coral Stylophora pistillata. Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology. Part A: Molecular & Integrative Physiology, 151 (1), 29-36. (doi:10.1016/j.cbpa.2008.05.009). (PMID:18606553)

Record type: Article

Abstract

High calcification rates observed in reef coral organisms are due to the symbiotic relationship established between scleractinian corals and their photosynthetic dinoflagellates, commonly called zooxanthellae. Zooxanthellae are known to enhance calcification in the light, a process referred as "light-enhanced calcification". The disruption of the relationship between corals and their zooxanthellae leads to bleaching. Bleaching is one of the major causes of the present decline of coral reefs related to climate change and anthropogenic activities. In our aquaria, corals experienced a chemical pollution leading to bleaching and ending with the death of corals. During the time course of this bleaching event, we measured multiple parameters and could evidence four major consecutive steps: 1) at month 1 (January 2005), the stress affected primarily the photosystem II machinery of zooxanthellae resulting in an immediate decrease of photosystem II efficiency, 2) at month 2, the stress affected the photosynthetic production of O2 by zooxanthellae and the rate of light calcification, 3) at month 3, there was a decrease in both light and dark calcification rates, the appearance of the first oxidative damage in the zooxanthellae, the disruption of symbiosis, 4) and finally the death of corals at month 6.

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Published date: September 2008
Organisations: Environmental

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Local EPrints ID: 341903
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/341903
ISSN: 1095-6433
PURE UUID: 7096e1cc-d11d-406d-ba6c-774c9c8f733a

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Date deposited: 08 Aug 2012 10:56
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 11:45

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Contributors

Author: Aurélie Moya
Author: Christine Ferrier-Pagès
Author: Paola Furla
Author: Sophie Richier
Author: Eric Tambutté
Author: Denis Allemand
Author: Sylvie Tambutté

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