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Presence of Symbiodinium spp. in macroalgal microhabitats from the southern Great Barrier Reef
Author(s) -
Dagoberto E. VeneraPontón,
Guillermo Díaz-Pulido,
Mauricio RodríguezLanetty,
Ove HoeghGuldberg
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
coral reefs
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.287
H-Index - 109
eISSN - 1432-0975
pISSN - 0722-4028
DOI - 10.1007/s00338-010-0666-6
Subject(s) - symbiodinium , reef , biology , coral reef , ecology , coral , great barrier reef , symbiosis , zooxanthellae , cnidaria , dinoflagellate , anthozoa , benthic zone , paleontology , bacteria
Coral reefs are highly dependent on the mutualistic symbiosis between reef-building corals and dinoflagellates from the genus Symbiodinium. These dinoflagellates spend part of their life cycle outside the coral host and in the majority of the cases have to re-infect corals each generation. While considerable insight has been gained about Symbiodinium in corals, little is known about the ecology and biology of Symbiodinium in other reef microhabitats. This study documents Symbiodinium associating with benthic macroalgae on the southern Great Barrier Reef, including some Symbiodinium that are genetically close to the symbiotic strains from reef-building corals. It is possible that some of these Symbiodinium were in hospite, associated to soritid foraminifera or ciliates; nevertheless, the presence of Symbiodinium C3 and C15 in macroalgal microhabitats may also suggest a potential link between communities of Symbiodinium associating with both coral hosts and macroalgae.Full Tex

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