Exam 2 Chapter 5- Coral Reefs

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91 Terms

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What are the benefits of coral reefs

1. food

2. tourism

3. medicine

4. fish nurseries

5. habitat for marine life

6. shoreline protection

7. aquarium industry

8. high species diversity

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Coral reef paradox

tropical waters surrounding coral reefs are nutrient poor but reef supports large amounts of sea life

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The coral reef is efficient at

cycling nutrients

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Coral reefs are

biological (corals) and geological structures (secretion of limestone)

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Coral reefs are found

worldwide

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Coral reefs are restricted to

shallow, regular salinity, clear waters in 20-30*C range

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Corals deposit what to build reefs?

calcium carbonate (CaCO3) or limestone

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Major groups of corals

Phylum Cnidarian; Class Anthozoan

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The anthozoan class lacks

a medusa stage and lives as polyps

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Scleractinian corals

Stony/true corals

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Scleractinian corals are the

main reef builders, almost all have zooxanthellae

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Soft corals are not

reef builders, most have zooanxthellae

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Coral morphologies

variety of coral structure

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Coral structure

- plate like

- foliaceous (leaf-like)

- columnar

- massive branching

- encrusting

- free-living

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Zooxanthellae ex

symbiotic single cell dinoflagellates

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Zooxanthellae are

photosynthetic algae living inside many corals

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When does coral bleaching occur

when zooxanthellae are expelled

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When can zooxanthellae be expelled?

When temps are too high or other stressful conditions

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Coral polyp

sessile sac-like structure, ring of tentacles armed with nematocysts

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Nematocysts are

released from cnidocytes, sting prey

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Reproduction of corals

- asexual by budding/fragmentation

- sexual by release of gametes into water

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What larvae of coral settles on substrates?

planula larvae

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Photosynthetic zooxanthellae provide corals with

nutrition to survive

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Most corals will also eat

zooplankton

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Whats caught by their tentacles?

detritus

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Mesenterial filaments

coiled tubes attached to wall of coral's gut secrete digestive enzymes

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Corals also absorb

dissolved organic matter (DOM)

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Types of Coral Reefs

- fringing reef

- barrier reef

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Fringing reefs are

the most common, near shore

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Fringing reefs are vulnerable to

human activity, freshwater run-off and sedimentation

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Fringing reefs basic structure

Reef flat, reef slope, reef crest

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Fringing Reef flat

shallow up to shore, gradually becomes deeper

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Fringing Reef slope

steep slope at edge of reef flat, more dense coral growth than flat

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Fringing Reef crest

edge of reef flat where the slope begins, often most corals

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Barrier reef

along coast, further away from shore than fringing reef

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Lagoons are

between shore and barrier reef ( soft sediment with seagrass)

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Lagoons can have

patch reefs, coral knolls or pinnacles

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Black-reef slope is

on lagoon side, wave action limits coral growth

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Barrier Reef flat is

- shallow

- can have seagrass beds

- some patch reefs

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Barrier Reef crest

- edge of fore-reef slope

- richest coral growth usually

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Barrier fore-reef slope

descent away from shore

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Barrier sand cays/keys

sand builds up

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Barrier spur and groove formations

sand channels along fore reef slope caused by wave and wind action

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Different shapes of corals grow at

different depths along slope

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Top depth

massive corals that can withstand wave action

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Mid-slope depth

vertical growing to maximize space competition

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Lower depth corals

spread out to capture more light

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Atolls are a

ring of reef surrounding central, shallow lagoon

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Most atolls occur in

indo-west pacific region

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Atolls can occur

far from shore (unlike barrier, ringing reefs)

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The outer and inner slopes of atolls

same as fore and back reef areas

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Windward side of atolls

tougher coralline algae

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Leeward side of atolls is

the sheltered side

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The outer reef atoll is

vertical, becomes deep fast

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In atolls, what prevents coral growth from bottom?

deep water

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Darwin proposed theory of Atoll formation

1. new volcanic mountain emerged

2. fringing reef formed

3. mountain sinks

4. reef flat becomes lagoon and barrier reef

5. island disappears, leaves only atoll

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Coral reef communities are

very complex ecosystems

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Space competition is

when space is limited on a reef; light competition

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Corals competition uses

mesenterial filaments to digest neighboring corals; sweeper tentacles

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Corals compete with

algae and seaweeds (grow faster)

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Coral Reef communities can be

nutrient limited, though grazed by herbivores

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Why is grazing on algae important

algae can take over reefs if left ungrazed

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What can remove grazers?

overfishing

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What is Diadema

long-spined urchins

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What can increase algae too?

Eutrophication from run-off

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Other coral reef primary producers

cyanobacteria, turf algae and coralline algae

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Other reef inhabitants

vertebrates and invertebrates

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Invertebrates being

mollusks, echinoderms, crustaceans, polychaete worms

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Vertebrates being

- herbivorous, carnivorous and omnivorous fish

- reptiles (snakes, sea turtles)

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Corallivores

eat coral, break off skeleton which breaks into smaller bits (bioerorsion)

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Bioersion and corallivores help build

beaches near coral reefs

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Symbiosts: Clownfish/Anemone

-clownfish protected by predators

- anemones stinging, gain nutrients from clownfish

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Symbiosts: Cleaning stations

- small invertebrates

- fish clean off parasites from other larger fish and marine reptiles

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Symbiosts: Shrimp goby/ pistol shrimp

- shrimp build tunnels for goby

- goby signals vision impaired shrimp of danger

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Mangroves

land trees/ shrubs adapted to being in marine environment

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Northern reach of mangroves is where

hard frost can regularly occur

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3 main types of mangroves (of many)

1. red mangrove 2. black mangrove 3. white mangrove

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Red mangrove

most salt-tolerant and found closest to shoreline

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Black mangrove

Found slightly more inland

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White mangrove

Least salt-tolerant and therefore found furthest inland

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All 3 species of mangroves must have

special adaptations to deal with low oxygen levels

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Special adaptations for mangroves

1. lenticels

2. pneumatophores

3. salt excretion

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Lenticels are

pores that bring up O2

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Pneumatophores

lateral roots that grow upward out of the mud and water to bring in oxygen

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Salt excretion occurs through

leaves too

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Reproduction in mangroves

elongated seedling attached to the parental tree

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Seedling also called

propagule

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In reproduction, the propagules

float in water until suitable habitat found

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Mangrove distribution

coastal areas in tropics and subtropics, climate change moving some further north

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Mangrove benefits

- fish nurseries

- shoreline protection

- filtration of runoff from land

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Mangrove loss

worldwide loss of mangroves due to development, shrimp farms