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Life history and stress response of Scleractinian corals
Hidaka, M. (2016). Life history and stress response of Scleractinian corals, in: Kayanne, H. (Ed.) Coral reef science: Strategy for ecosystem symbiosis and coexistence with humans under multiple stresses. Coral Reefs of the World, 5: pp. 1-24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-4-431-54364-0_1
In: Kayanne, H. (Ed.) (2016). Coral reef science: Strategy for ecosystem symbiosis and coexistence with humans under multiple stresses. Coral Reefs of the World, 5. Springer: Tokyo. ISBN 978-4-431-54363-3; e-ISBN 978-4-431-54364-0. ix, 101 pp. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-4-431-54364-0, more
In: Coral Reefs of the World. Springer: Dordrecht. ISSN 2213-719X, more

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Keywords
    Interspecific relationships > Symbiosis
    Life history
    Marine/Coastal
Author keywords
    Planula; Stress response; Zooxanthella

Author  Top 
  • Hidaka, M.

Abstract
    Symbiosis with zooxanthellae (symbiotic dinoflagellates) and high capacities for clonal reproduction and regeneration are important life history traits of reef-building corals. This chapter reviews the life history of reef-building corals and the symbiotic relationships between corals and their algal symbionts and discusses possible collaborative defense systems against environmental stresses as well as mechanisms of adaptation to environmental changes in coral–zooxanthella symbiotic systems. Most corals associate with one main type of symbiont, although minor or cryptic symbiont types are often detected within a colony. The association between the coral host and algal symbiont appears to be stable, and the original symbiont often returns when corals recover from bleaching. Some corals, such as the massive Porites, exhibit high fidelity to certain types of algal symbionts and still have high stress tolerance as well as long life spans suggesting the possibility that stem cells and algal symbiont cells in such long-lived colonies accumulate mutations; in turn, if cells with a higher fitness for a new environment proliferate within a colony, the colony may be able to adapt to the new environment.

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