| Literature DB >> 27004146 |
Rosa E Rodríguez-Martínez1, Adán Guillermo Jordán-Garza2, Eric Jordán-Dahlgren1.
Abstract
The extraction of tissue-skeleton cores from coral colonies is a common procedure to study diverse aspects of their biology, water quality or to obtain environmental proxies. Coral species preferred for such studies in Caribbean reefs belong to the genera Orbicella. The long term effects of coring in the coral colony are seldom evaluated and in many Caribbean countries this practice is not regulated. We monitored 50 lesions produced on Orbicella faveolata colonies by the extraction of two centimeter-diameter cores to determine if they were able to heal after a four year period. At the end of the study 4% of the lesions underwent full regeneration, 52% underwent partial regeneration, 14% suffered additional tissue loss but remained surrounded by live tissue, and 30% merged with dead areas of the colonies. Given the low capacity of Orbicella faveolata to regenerate tissue-skeleton lesions, studies that use coring should be regulated and mitigation actions, such as using less destructive techniques and remediation measures after extraction, should be conducted to facilitate tissue regeneration.Entities:
Keywords: Coral; Core sampling; Tissue regeneration; Tissue-skeleton lesions
Year: 2016 PMID: 27004146 PMCID: PMC4800412 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.1596
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Examples of different outcomes of tissue-skeleton core lesions in Orbicella faveolata: (A) full regeneration, (B) partial regeneration, (C) additional tissue loss, but still surrounded by live tissue and (D) lesion merged with a dead area of the colony and is no longer enclosed by live tissue.
The photographs in the 2010–2011 column were taken between September 2010 and February 2011 and those in the 2015 column were taken in May 2015.
Figure 2Percentage of lesions that underwent full and partial regeneration of tissue and those that increased in size or were no longer enclosed by live tissue in healthy, healthy-disease, and yellow-band disease colonies between 2010–2011 and 2015.
Figure 3Percent area recovered four years after the extraction of tissue-skeleton cores from 13 colonies of Orbicella faveolata.
The number of lesions varied from one to three per coral colony. Only the colonies where lesion regeneration occurred are shown in the figure.