scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Evolutionary ecology of colonial reef‐organisms, with particular reference to corals

R. N. Hughes
- 01 Aug 1983 - 
- Vol. 20, Iss: 1, pp 39-58
TLDR
Sedentary reef-organisms such as sponges, colonial coelenterates, bryozoans and compound ascidians produce repeated modules (aquiferous systems, polyps, zooids) as they grow to alleviate constraints on biomass imposed by mechanical and energetic factors that are functions of the surface area to volume ratio.
Abstract
Sedentary reef-organisms such as sponges, colonial coelenterates, bryozoans and compound ascidians produce repeated modules (aquiferous systems, polyps, zooids) as they grow. Modular construction alleviates constraints on biomass imposed by mechanical and energetic factors that are functions of the surface area to volume ratio. Colonies thus may grow large whilst preserving optimal modular dimensions. Among corals, optimal polyp size is smaller in the more autotrophic than in the more heterotrophic species. Modular construction allows flexibility of growth form, which can adapt to factors such as water currents, silting, light intensity and proximity of competitors. Modular colonies have great regenerative capacities, even separated fragments may survive and grow into new colonies. All fragments from a parental colony are genetically identical and large branching corals frequently undergo clonal propagation through fragmentation during storms. Soft corals can also fragment endogenously. By spreading the risk of mortality among independent units, the generation and dispersal of fragments lessens the likelihood of clonal extinction. In spite of their ability to propagate asexually, most benthic colonial animals also reproduce asexually. The selective advantages of the genetic diversity among sexually produced offspring seem not to be linked with dispersal, but probably lie in the biological interactions with competitors, predators and pathogens in the parental habitat. Age at first sexual maturity and the proportional investment of resources in sexual reproduction are related to colonial survivorship. Small branching corals on reef flats grow quickly, attain sexual maturity within 1–4 years, planulate extensively, but reach only small sizes before dying. Massive corals are longer lived and have the opposite characteristics of growth and reproduction. Most sessile reef organisms compete for space, food or light. Faster growers can potentially outcompete slower growers, but are often prevented from doing so by several forms of aggression from competitors and by the damage inflicted by storms. Competitive interactions among sedentary organisms on coral reefs are unlikely to be linear or deterministic, and so the co-existence of diverse species is possible.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Morphological plasticity in scleractinian corals.

TL;DR: Evidence to date suggests light and water movement are the most important variables inducing change, and it is possible that associated plastic changes in corals are adaptive; however, this hypothesis is yet to be tested rigorously.
Journal ArticleDOI

Clonal variation for phenotypic plasticity in the coral Madracis mirabilis

TL;DR: Four of the five corallite traits and branch diameter were significantly affected by the environment, demonstrating that mor- phological variation among environments in M. mirabilis is due in large part to phenotypic plasticity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Some Life-History Consequences of Modular Construction in Plants

TL;DR: The nature and life-history consequences of modular construction in plants are discussed with particular reference to growth, reproduction and survival, and there are fundamental differences between the reproductive schedules of plants with a single shoot module and those with many shoot modules.
Journal ArticleDOI

Life-history concepts and the population biology of clonal organisms

TL;DR: A model is presented of a size-structured population of genets, in which each genet comprises an age- Structured metapopulation of modules, and predicts that the extent to which clonal growth evolves depends on constraints in genet architecture.
Journal ArticleDOI

What are the physiological and immunological responses of coral to climate warming and disease

TL;DR: There is huge variability in responses among coral species, and the rate of climate change is projected to be so rapid that only extremely hardy taxa are likely to survive the projected changes in climate stressors.
References
More filters
Book

Population Biology of Plants

Journal ArticleDOI

Population Biology of Plants.

Journal ArticleDOI

Diversity in tropical rain forests and coral reefs.

TL;DR: The commonly observed high diversity of trees in tropical rain forests and corals on tropical reefs is a nonequilibrium state which, if not disturbed further, will progress toward a low-diversity equilibrium community as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Life-history tactics: a review of the ideas.

TL;DR: This review organizes ideas on the evolution of life histories into more comprehensive theory that makes more readily falsifiable predictions, and examination of different definitions of fitness.
Book

The Evolution of Sex

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared the short-term advantages of sex and recombination in a finite population with the long-term consequences of recombination and sex and showed that recombination has shortterm advantages for both sexes.
Related Papers (5)