Stable isotopes ( delta super(13)C and delta super(15)N) of organic matrix from coral skeleton
The evolutionary success of reef-building corals in nutrient-poor tropical waters is attributed to endosymbiotic dinoflagellates. The algae release photosynthetic products to the coral animal cells, augment nutrient flux, and enhance the rate of coral calcification. Natural abundance of stable isoto...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2005-02, Vol.102 (5), p.1525-1530 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The evolutionary success of reef-building corals in nutrient-poor tropical waters is attributed to endosymbiotic dinoflagellates. The algae release photosynthetic products to the coral animal cells, augment nutrient flux, and enhance the rate of coral calcification. Natural abundance of stable isotopes ( delta super(13)C and delta super(18)O) provides answers to modern and paleobiological questions about the effect of photosymbiosis on sources of carbon and oxygen in coral skeletal calcium carbonate. Here we compare 17 species of symbiotic and nonsymbiotic corals to determine whether evidence for photosymbiosis appears in stable isotopes ( delta super(13)C and delta super(15)N) of an organic skeletal compartment, the coral skeletal organic matrix (OM). Mean OM delta super(13)C in symbiotic and nonsymbiotic corals was similar (-26.08ppm vs. -24.31ppm), but mean OM delta super(15)N was significantly depleted in super(15)N in the former (4.09ppm) relative to the latter (12.28ppm), indicating an effect of the algae on OM synthesis and revealing OM delta super(15)N as a proxy for photosymbiosis. To answer an important paleobiological question about the origin of photosymbiosis in reef-building corals, we applied this proxy test to a fossil coral (Pachythecalis major) from the Triassic (240 million years ago) in which OM is preserved. Mean OM delta super(15)N was 4.66ppm, suggesting that P. major was photosymbiotic. The results show that symbiotic algae augment coral calcification by contributing to the synthesis of skeletal OM and that they may have done so as early as the Triassic. |
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ISSN: | 0027-8424 1091-6490 |