Re: 02 and corals bleaching
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=10223949#post10223949 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by elegance coral
I am trying to understand coral bleaching. Is there a connection between temp and lighting?
Yes, there is a connection between elevated water temperature and UV-B radiation. Exposure to elevated temperature and UV-B radiation causes a depression of photosynthesis (Lesser 1996).
The coral is able to protect its zooxanthellae from elevated UV-B radiation provided the water temperature does not exceed normal maximum levels. Once the water temperature gets around 31 degrees C, the coral can no longer protect its zooxanthellae.
Various hypotheses have been advanced to explain the cellular mechanism of bleaching when extreme sea temperatures are one of the causative factors. Bleaching can also be caused by other factors, such as heavy rainfall, sedimentation, etc.
High temperature and irradiance stressors have been implicated in the disruption of enzyme systems in zooxanthellae that offer protection against oxygen toxicity. Photosynthesis pathways in zooxanthellae are impaired at temperatures above 30 degrees C, this effect could activate the disassociation of coral / algal symbiosis. Low- or high-temperature shocks results in zooxanthellae loss as a result of cell adhesion dysfunction. This involves the detachment of cnidarian endodermal cells with their zooxanthellae and the eventual expulsion of both cell types.
It has also been hypothesized that bleaching in some cases is an adaptive mechanism which allows the coral to be repopulated with a different type of zooxanthellae, possibly conferring greater stress resistance.