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Stress response of two coral species in the Kavaratti atoll of the Lakshadweep Archipelago, India

DRS at CSIR-National Institute of Oceanography

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Title Stress response of two coral species in the Kavaratti atoll of the Lakshadweep Archipelago, India
 
Creator Harithsa, S.
Raghukumar, C.
Dalal, S.G.
 
Subject Porites lutea
Acropora formosa
zooxanthellae density
lipofuscin granules
Lakshadweep Islands
mitotic index
 
Description Frequent occurrences of coral bleaching and the ensuing damage to coral reefs have generated interest in documenting stress responses that precede bleaching.. The objective of this study was to assess and compare physiological changes in healthy, semi-bleached and totally bleached colonies of two coral species, Porites lutea and Acropora formosa during a natural bleaching event in the Lakshadweep Archipelago in the Arabian Sea to determine the traits that will be useful in diagnosis of coral health. In April, 2002, three ?health conditions? were observed as ?appearing healthy?, ?semi-bleached? and ?bleached? specimens for two dominant and co-occurring coral species in these islands. Changes in the pigment composition, zooxanthellae density, mitotic index of zooxanthellae, RNA/DNA ratios and protein profile in the two coral species showing different levels of bleaching in the field were compared to address the hypothesis of no difference in health condition between species and bleaching status. The loss in chlorophyll a and chlorophyll c and zooxanthellae density in the transitional stage of semi-bleaching in the branched coral A. formosa was 80, 75 and 80% respectively. The losses were much less in the massive coral P. lutea, being 20, 50 and 25% respectively. The decrease in zooxanthellar density and chlorophyll a was accompanied by an increased mitotic index of zooxanthellae and RNA/DNA ratios in both the species. There was an increase in accumulation of lipofuscin granules in partially bleached P. lutea tissue, which is an indication of cellular senescence. Multivariate statistical analyses showed that colonies of P. lutea ranked in different health conditions differed significantly in chl a, chl c, zooxanthellae density, RNA/DNA ratios and protein concentrations whereas in A. formosa chl a, chl c, chl a/c, phaeopigments and mitotic index contributed to the variance between health conditions.
 
Date 2006-06-28T11:35:49Z
2006-06-28T11:35:49Z
2005
 
Type Journal Article
 
Identifier Coral Reefs, vol. 24(3), 463-474p.
http://drs.nio.org/drs/handle/2264/169
 
Language en
 
Rights An edited version of this paper was published by Springer. Copyright [2005] Springer
 
Format 914328 bytes
application/pdf
 
Publisher Springer-Verlag