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Reef-building corals and the microscopic algae within their cells evolve together


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IMAGE: Reef-building corals, such as elkhorn coral (Acropora palmata) staghorn coral (Acropora cervicornis), and their hybrid, all pictured here, coevolve with the microscopic algae that live within their cells, according to.
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Credit: Lisa Carne, Fragments of Hope Belize
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. The microscopic algae that live inside and provide nutrients to their reef-building coral hosts may be evolving in tandem with the corals they inhabit, so each partner is fine-tuned to meet one another s needs. A new study by Penn State biologists reveals that genetic differences within a species of these microalgal symbionts correspond to the coral species they inhabit, a discovery that could have implications for the conservation of these endangered corals. ....

Caribbean Sea , Belize General , Nicole Fogarty , Meghann Devlin Durante , Hannah Reich , Iliana Baums , Kathryn Stankiewicz , California Institute Of Technology , University Of Rhode Island , National Science Foundation , University Of North Carolina , Penn State , Sheila Kitchen , California Institute , North Carolina , National Science , Ecology Environment , Marine Freshwater Biology , Molecular Biology , கரீபியன் கடல் , பெலிஸ் ஜநரல் , நிக்கோல் ஃபோகார்டி , ஹன்னா ரீச் , இழியான பாம்ஸ் , கலிஃபோர்னியா நிறுவனம் ஆஃப் தொழில்நுட்பம் , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் ரோட் தீவு ,

Reef-building corals and microscopic algae within their cells evolve together


Date Time
Reef-building corals and microscopic algae within their cells evolve together
Reef-building corals, such as elkhorn coral (Acropora palmata), staghorn coral (Acropora cervicornis), and their hybrid, all pictured here, co-evolve with the microscopic algae that live within their cells, according to a new study by Penn State biologists.
Image: Lisa Carne, Fragments of Hope Belize
The microscopic algae that live inside and provide nutrients to their reef-building coral hosts may be evolving in tandem with the corals they inhabit, so each partner is fine-tuned to meet one another’s needs. A new study by Penn State biologists reveals that genetic differences within a species of these microalgal symbionts correspond to the coral species they inhabit, a discovery that could have implications for the conservation of these endangered corals. ....

Caribbean Sea , Belize General , Nicole Fogarty , Meghann Devlin Durante , Hannah Reich , Iliana Baums , Kathryn Stankiewicz , California Institute Of Technology , University Of Rhode Island , National Science Foundation , University Of North Carolina , Penn State , Sheila Kitchen , California Institute , Lisa Carne , North Carolina , National Science , கரீபியன் கடல் , பெலிஸ் ஜநரல் , நிக்கோல் ஃபோகார்டி , ஹன்னா ரீச் , இழியான பாம்ஸ் , கலிஃபோர்னியா நிறுவனம் ஆஃப் தொழில்நுட்பம் , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் ரோட் தீவு , தேசிய அறிவியல் அடித்தளம் , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் வடக்கு கரோலினா ,