2015
DOI: 10.1007/s00338-015-1276-0
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Endolithic community composition of Orbicella faveolata (Scleractinia) underneath the interface between coral tissue and turf algae

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Cited by 9 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…The functional genes of other eukaryote algae increased in abundance during bleaching, indicating that the photosystems of other eukaryotes (such as Bacillariophyta, Chlorophyta) used a different mechanism and had higher levels of thermal tolerance compared to Dinophyceae algae. It was also thought that other endosymbiotic algae benefit the host coral during periods of stress (Gutiérrez-Isaza et al, 2015;del Campo et al, 2016). This may be because during bleaching, the shading effect of Symbiodiniaceae was lost, allowing increased light to penetrate the coral skeleton, possibly resulting in increased photosynthetic activity of these algae.…”
Section: Importance Of Other Eukaryotes (Fungi and Algae) In Bleachinmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The functional genes of other eukaryote algae increased in abundance during bleaching, indicating that the photosystems of other eukaryotes (such as Bacillariophyta, Chlorophyta) used a different mechanism and had higher levels of thermal tolerance compared to Dinophyceae algae. It was also thought that other endosymbiotic algae benefit the host coral during periods of stress (Gutiérrez-Isaza et al, 2015;del Campo et al, 2016). This may be because during bleaching, the shading effect of Symbiodiniaceae was lost, allowing increased light to penetrate the coral skeleton, possibly resulting in increased photosynthetic activity of these algae.…”
Section: Importance Of Other Eukaryotes (Fungi and Algae) In Bleachinmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, the benthic organism adjacent to corals is likely to be an important factor; phototrophic endolithic communities can be both more abundant and diverse when living beneath turf algae compared with beneath Orbicella sp. corals (Gutiérrez-Isaza et al 2015). Together, this suggests that a coral's position within the benthos is a factor in determining the extent of endolithic algal blooms.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…This may be due to the surfaces on the coral heads being newly opened for turf algal colonization, a preferred foraging substrate for all parrotfish species, which commonly inhabit these reefs [51]. Alternatively, the newly available coral tissue could be providing nutritional benefits or a greater concentration of autotrophic organisms that attracted parrotfish foragers [64]. Herbivores on artificial structures were not significantly different from on natural structures, perhaps because after 2 weeks, we observed that the artificial structures had accumulated enough biofilm to be a suitable foraging substrate (Figure 3).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%