Limnology and Oceanography, Vol. 56, No. 4 (2011), pp. 1285-1296 (12 pages) We determined the source of fatty acids in scleractinian corals by separately measuring and comparing the δ13C values of ...
Researchers and tourism operators are alarmed as a survey of the WA coast after an intense marine heatwave reveals ...
Your Artstor image groups were copied to Workspace. The Artstor website will be retired on Aug 1st. Limnology and Oceanography Vol. 56, No. 1, 2011 Increased rate of D1 repair in coral sym... We ...
When corals are exposed to elevated ocean temperatures, they’re susceptible to coral bleaching — which means they expel the colorful zooxanthellae algae they need to survive. While some corals may ...
Corals have a symbiotic relationship with a tiny marine algae called 'zooxanthellae' that live inside and nourish them. When sea surface temperatures rise, corals expel the colourful algae.
Most hard corals grow thanks to a symbiotic relationship between the coral polyp and zooxanthellae - essentially algae - that through photosynthesis produce glucose, energy, to enable the hard corals ...
Exposed to warmer water, corals release photosynthetic cells called zooxanthellae, destroying the symbiotic relationship. The corals cannot survive without zooxanthellae and become whitish.
Two iconic Australian reefs face simultaneous coral bleaching, highlighting urgent threats to ocean ecosystems ...
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