نتایج جستجو برای: corals

تعداد نتایج: 5041  

2010
E. Charlotte E. Kvennefors Eugenia Sampayo Tyrone Ridgway Andrew C. Barnes Ove Hoegh-Guldberg

BACKGROUND Coral-associated bacteria are increasingly considered to be important in coral health, and altered bacterial community structures have been linked to both coral disease and bleaching. Despite this, assessments of bacterial communities on corals rarely apply sufficient replication to adequately describe the natural variability. Replicated data such as these are crucial in determining ...

2011
Bernhard M. Riegl Sam J. Purkis Ashraf S. Al-Cibahy Mohammed A. Abdel-Moati Ove Hoegh-Guldberg

Climate change scenarios suggest an increase in tropical ocean temperature by 1-3°C by 2099, potentially killing many coral reefs. But Arabian/Persian Gulf corals already exist in this future thermal environment predicted for most tropical reefs and survived severe bleaching in 2010, one of the hottest years on record. Exposure to 33-35°C was on average twice as long as in non-bleaching years. ...

2018
Helike Lõhelaid Nigulas Samel

Oxylipins are well-established lipid mediators in plants and animals. In mammals, arachidonic acid (AA)-derived eicosanoids control inflammation, fever, blood coagulation, pain perception and labor, and, accordingly, are used as drugs, while lipoxygenases (LOX), as well as cyclooxygenases (COX) serve as therapeutic targets for drug development. In soft corals, eicosanoids are synthesized on dem...

2012
Robert J. Miller John Hocevar Robert P. Stone Dmitry V. Fedorov

Continental margins are dynamic, heterogeneous settings that can include canyons, seamounts, and banks. Two of the largest canyons in the world, Zhemchug and Pribilof, cut into the edge of the continental shelf in the southeastern Bering Sea. Here currents and upwelling interact to produce a highly productive area, termed the Green Belt, that supports an abundance of fishes and squids as well a...

Journal: :FEMS microbiology ecology 2012
Bryan Wilson Greta S Aeby Thierry M Work David G Bourne

Acropora white syndrome (AWS) is characterized by rapid tissue loss revealing the white underlying skeleton and affects corals worldwide; however, reports of causal agents are conflicting. Samples were collected from healthy and diseased corals and seawater around American Samoa and bacteria associated with AWS characterized using both culture-dependent and culture-independent methods, from cor...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2014
Orr H Shapiro Vicente I Fernandez Melissa Garren Jeffrey S Guasto François P Debaillon-Vesque Esti Kramarsky-Winter Assaf Vardi Roman Stocker

The exchange of nutrients and dissolved gasses between corals and their environment is a critical determinant of the growth of coral colonies and the productivity of coral reefs. To date, this exchange has been assumed to be limited by molecular diffusion through an unstirred boundary layer extending 1-2 mm from the coral surface, with corals relying solely on external flow to overcome this lim...

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 2004
James M Cervino Raymond L Hayes Shawn W Polson Sara C Polson Thomas J Goreau Robert J Martinez Garriet W Smith

The bacterial and temperature factors leading to yellow blotch/band disease (YBD), which affects the major reef-building Caribbean corals Montastrea spp., have been investigated. Groups of bacteria isolated from affected corals and inoculated onto healthy corals caused disease signs similar to those of YBD. The 16S rRNA genes from these bacteria were sequenced and found to correspond to four Vi...

2006
Tamar L. Goulet

Many corals (stony corals and octocorals) rely on their symbiotic algae (zooxanthellae) for survival. Under stress, zooxanthellae are expelled, resulting in coral bleaching. The hypothesis that corals may survive climate change by exchanging algal types is shown here to be potentially applicable only to a minority of corals. Data on 442 coral species from 43 studies reveal that only a few coral...

2016
Julie L. Meyer John M. Rodgers Brian A. Dillard Valerie J. Paul Max Teplitski

Dark Spot Syndrome (DSS) is one of the most common diseases of boulder corals in the Caribbean. It presents as sunken brown lesions in coral tissue, which can spread quickly over coral colonies. With this study, we tested the hypothesis that similar to other coral diseases, DSS is a dysbiosis characterized by global shifts in the coral microbiome. Because Black Band Disease (BBD) was sometimes ...

1999
JOHN J. STACHOWICZ MARK E. HAY

Because seaweeds uncontrolled by herbivores can overgrow and kill corals, competition can exclude corals from temperate latitudes where herbivores generally fail to control seaweed biomass. In this study, we show that the coral Oculina arbuscula persists on reefs in temperate North Carolina where seaweeds are common by harboring the omnivorous crab Mithrax forceps, which removes seaweeds and in...

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