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2013
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How is light distributed within coral tissue? Does coral tissue propagate light? Conclusion: Tissue optics important for coral physiology → Microalgae inhabit a strongly heterogeneous light environment. → Lateral light transfer leads to efficient resource distribution. → Tissue optics likely key factor for high photosynthetic efficiency in corals. → Need for characterisation of inherent optical properties of coral tissue.
Frontiers in Microbiology, 2012
Light quantity and quality are among the most important factors determining the physiology and stress response of zooxanthellate corals. Yet, almost nothing is known about the light field that Symbiodinium experiences within their coral host, and the basic optical properties of coral tissue are unknown. We used scalar irradiance microprobes to characterize vertical and lateral light gradients within and across tissues of several coral species. Our results revealed the presence of steep light gradients with photosynthetically available radiation decreasing by about one order of magnitude from the tissue surface to the coral skeleton. Surface scalar irradiance was consistently higher over polyp tissue than over coenosarc tissue in faviid corals. Coral bleaching increased surface scalar irradiance by ∼150% (between 500 and 700 nm) relative to a healthy coral. Photosynthesis peaked around 300 μm within the tissue, which corresponded to a zone exhibiting strongest depletion of scalar irradiance. Deeper coral tissue layers, e.g., ∼1000 μm into aboral polyp tissues, harbor optical microniches, where only ∼10% of the incident irradiance remains. We conclude that the optical microenvironment of corals exhibits strong lateral and vertical gradients of scalar irradiance, which are affected by both tissue and skeleton optical properties. Our results imply that zooxanthellae populations inhabit a strongly heterogeneous light environment and highlight the presence of different optical microniches in corals; an important finding for understanding the photobiology, stress response, as well as the phenotypic and genotypic plasticity of coral symbionts.
Journal of Experimental Biology, 2014
Coral tissue optics has received very little attention in the past, although the interaction between tissue and light is central to our basic understanding of coral physiology. Here we used fibre-optic and electrochemical microsensors along with variable chlorophyll fluorescence imaging to directly measure lateral light propagation within living coral tissues. Our results show that corals can transfer light laterally within their tissues to a distance of ~2 cm. Such light transport stimulates O 2 evolution and photosystem II operating efficiency in areas >0.5-1 cm away from direct illumination. Light is scattered strongly in both coral tissue and skeleton, leading to photon trapping and lateral redistribution within the tissue. Lateral light transfer in coral tissue is a new mechanism by which light is redistributed over the coral colony and we argue that tissue optical properties are one of the key factors in explaining the high photosynthetic efficiency of corals.
Frontiers in Marine Science, 2019
Limnology and Oceanography, 2014
We used a novel diver-operated microsensor system to collect in situ spectrally resolved light fields on corals with a micrometer spatial resolution. The light microenvironment differed between polyp and coenosarc tissues with scalar irradiance (400-700 nm) over polyp tissue, attenuating between 5.1-and 7.8-fold from top to base of small hemispherical coral colonies, whereas attenuation was at most 1.5-fold for coenosarc tissue. Fluctuations in ambient solar irradiance induced changes in light and oxygen microenvironments, which were more pronounced and faster in coenosarc compared with polyp tissue. Backscattered light from the surrounding benthos contributed . 20% of total scalar irradiance at the coral tissue surface and enhanced symbiont photosynthesis and the local O 2 concentration, indicating an important role of benthos optics for coral ecophysiology. Light fields on corals are species and tissue specific and exhibit pronounced variation on scales from micrometers to decimeters. Consequently, the distribution, genetic diversity, and physiology of coral symbionts must be coupled with the measurements of their actual light microenvironment to achieve a more comprehensive understanding of coral ecophysiology.
Coral Reefs, 2005
An integrating sphere was used to estimate the fraction of the incident quantum flux absorbed by a coral colony placed within it. This method allows one to examine the in vivo light absorption of intact coral colonies. We used this method to study effects of colony morphology, size, and photoacclimation status on the light harvesting efficiency by the zooxanthellae. Light absorption per unit of coral surface area decreased with increase in colony size, with a clear effect of different coral morphologies. In branched colonies, shading among branches reduced the absorbed light per unit area and per zooxanthellae. Photoacclimation to low light resulted in increased cellular chlorophyll concentrations in the zooxanthellae. In shade acclimated colonies, areal chlorophyll concentrations increased significantly, leading to more overlap among the optical cross-sections of pigments within cells and mutual shading among cells. These ''package effects'' showed up as a decrease in the in vivo, chlorophyll-a specific, spectral average, effective optical cross-section, a*. An integrating sphere is a useful tool for collecting optical information on corals.
2011
Adjusting the light exposure and capture of their symbiotic photosynthetic dinoflagellates (genus Symbiodinium Freud.) is central to the success of reef-building corals (order Scleractinia) across high spatio-temporal variation in the light environment of coral reefs. We tested the hypothesis that optical properties of tissues in some coral species can provide light management at the tissue scale comparable to light modulation by colony architecture in other species. We compared within-tissue scalar irradiance in two coral species from the same light habitat but with contrasting colony growth forms: branching Stylophora pistillata and massive Lobophyllia corymbosa. Scalar irradiance at the level of the symbionts (2 mm into the coral tissues) were <10% of ambient irradiance and nearly identical for the two species, despite substantially different light environments at the tissue surface. In S. pistillata, light attenuation (90% relative to ambient) was observed predominantly at the colony level as a result of branch-to-branch self-shading, while in L. corymbosa, near-complete light attenuation (97% relative to ambient) was occurring due to tissue optical properties. The latter could be explained partly by differences in photosynthetic pigment content in the symbiont cells and pigmentation in the coral host tissue. Our results demonstrate that different strategies of light modulation at colony, polyp, and cellular levels by contrasting morphologies are equally effective in achieving favorable irradiances at the level of coral photosymbionts.
Applied Optics, 2010
We present an experimental and numerical study of the effects of multiple scattering on the optical properties of reef-building corals. For this, we propose a simplified optical model of the coral and describe in some detail methods for characterizing the coral skeleton and the layer containing the symbiotic algae. The model is used to study the absorption of light by the layer of tissue containing the microalgae by means of Monte Carlo simulations. The results show that, through scattering, the skeleton homogenizes and enhances the light environment in which the symbionts live. We also present results that illustrate the modification of the internal light environment when the corals loose symbionts or pigmentation.
Proceedings. Biological sciences, 2017
Multiple scattering of light on coral skeleton enhances light absorption efficiency of coral symbionts and plays a key role in the regulation of their internal diffuse light field. To understand the dependence of this enhancement on skeleton meso- and macrostructure, we analysed the scattering abilities of naked coral skeletons for 74 Indo-Pacific species. Sensitive morphotypes to thermal and light stress, flat-extraplanate and branching corals, showed the most efficient structures, while massive-robust species were less efficient. The lowest light-enhancing scattering abilities were found for the most primitive colonial growth form: phaceloid. Accordingly, the development of highly efficient light-collecting structures versus the selection of less efficient but more robust holobionts to cope with light stress may constitute a trade-off in the evolution of modern symbiotic scleractinian corals, characterizing two successful adaptive solutions. The coincidence of the most important s...
Revista Práxis e Hegemonia Popular, 2020
O presente texto buscou compreender o tratamento de Antonio Gramsci ao fascismo italiano, no marco da complexidade, indicando elementos de sua origem, implementação e consequências políticas e sociais para a Itália e Europa. Gramsci o define como uma expressão política ocidental no momento em que as classes dominantes estão fragmentadas e fragilizadas na relação com os grupos subalternos. Também indica que opensador não admite simplificações na leitura de um fenômeno que deve ser compreendido pela dialética, uma vez que possui suas mediações em todas as dimensões sociais, incluindo o campo cultural. De outro lado é também a indicação do limite das classes dominantes por não conseguirem produzir a ampla sociabilidade, tendo que impor seus projetos via coerção dos grupos subalternos. É um movimento que se expressa como revolução passiva ou “revolução-restauração” e incorpora, especialmente a partir de 1900, o modelo da cooptação de grupos inteiros para o projeto das classes dominante...
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