| Literature DB >> 27397755 |
Jenny Carolina Rodríguez-Villalobos1, Thierry Martin Work2, Luis Eduardo Calderon-Aguilera3.
Abstract
Corals routinely lose tissue due to causes ranging from predation to disease. Tissue healing and regeneration are fundamental to the normal functioning of corals, yet we know little about this process. We described the microscopic morphology of wound repair in Pocillopora damicornis. Tissue was removed by airbrushing fragments from three healthy colonies, and these were monitored daily at the gross and microscopic level for 40days. Grossly, corals healed by Day 30, but repigmentation was not evident at the end of the study (40d). On histology, from Day 8 onwards, tissues at the lesion site were microscopically indistinguishable from adjacent normal tissues with evidence of zooxanthellae in gastrodermis. Inflammation was not evident. P. damicornis manifested a unique mode of regeneration involving projections of cell-covered mesoglea from the surface body wall that anastomosed to form gastrovascular canals.Entities:
Keywords: Coral; Healing; Histopathology; Pocillopora damicornis; Pocilloporidae; Tissue loss
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27397755 DOI: 10.1016/j.jip.2016.07.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Invertebr Pathol ISSN: 0022-2011 Impact factor: 2.841