1. Temperature dependence of aragonite and calcite skeleton formation by a scleractinian coral in low mMg/Ca seawater.
- Author
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Tomihiko Higuchi, Kotaro Shirai, Takuma Mezaki, and Ikuko Yuyama
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ARAGONITE , *CALCITE , *SCLERACTINIA , *SEAWATER , *ACROPORA , *CORALS , *PHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
Temperature-dependent aragonite and calcite formation by scleractinian corals were examined in low molar (m) Mg/Ca seawater, the experimental conditions replicating the fluctuating mMg/Ca levels prevailing throughout the Phanerozoic Eon. Incubation and skeletal growth monitoring of juveniles of the scleractinian coral Acropora solitaryensis for 4 months from the planula stage, in seawater with mMg/Ca ratios of 5.2, 1.0, and 0.5, and temperatures of 19-28 °C, indicated that polymorphism of present-day scleractinian corals in low mMg/Ca seawater is also influenced by seawater temperature. However, corals produced more aragonite than formed in inorganic CaCO3 precipitation experiments under the same conditions, except at 19 °C. Although the aragonite content reflected the results of the latter (abiotic) experiments at 19 °C, it is suggested that aragonitic scleractinian corals controlled skeletal formation biologically under low mMg/Ca conditions at higher temperature, growth rates being faster at 25 °C and slower at 19 °C for all mMg/Ca ratios. Compared with growth rates under the present-day-equivalent seawater Mg/Ca level of 5.2, juvenile growth decreased by 62.8% ± 14.7% and 56.7% ± 6.7% under mMg/Ca levels of 1.0 and 0.5, respectively; the results suggest that growth of aragonitic scleractinian corals is suppressed throughout varying seasonal temperatures under low mMg/ Ca conditions. This supports previous findings from variable temperature perspectives that scleractinian corals grow more slowly in low mMg/Ca (Cretaceous) seawater, interpreted as a possible explanation for the hiatus in scleractinian reef building in the Cretaceous Period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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