Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4397942 | Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology | 2007 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
External chemical signals used by scleractinian corals to recognize suitable substrata for larval settlement and metamorphosis were identified from crustose coralline red algae (CCA). A fragment of coral rubble with CCA induced larval metamorphosis of the scleractinian coral Pseudosiderastrea tayamai. A natural inducer and compounds that enhanced its effect in larval metamorphosis were isolated from the methanol extracts of coral rubble with CCA. A bromotyrosine derivative, 11-deoxyfistularin-3 (10â 7 M) isolated from the CCA, induced the metamorphosis of P. tayamai larvae (27.5 ± 24.0%). In the presence of fucoxanthinol (10â 9 M) and fucoxanthin (10â 9 M), the percentage of metamorphosis induced by the bromotyrosine derivative was further enhanced to 87.8 ± 13.0 and 88.4 ± 17.8%, respectively. Both carotenoids are also found in the coral rubble with CCA. These results suggest that bromotyrosine derivative and carotenoids have a synergistic effect in the metamorphosis of P. tayamai larvae. The synergistic effect provides a higher selectivity for recruitment than a single-component natural inducer for recognizing suitable substrata for larval metamorphosis. Thus, the effect might offer a survival advantage for benthic marine invertebrates.
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Authors
M. Kitamura, T. Koyama, Y. Nakano, D. Uemura,