<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8607617#post8607617 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Shawnts106
... I didnt think the corals could uptake Amino Acids up through tissues through the water column?
The thread that MiddletonMark cited presents some excellent stuff. Definitely worth the read. For example ...
First, corals and many marine invertebrates can directly take up many types of dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) including any amino acid used in the assays (they also take up DOP and DOC, but unless the substance is a sugar or somethign of that sort, must dissolved organics include C, N and P within the same molecule). If the question is do coral holobionts direclty take up amino acids from solution, the answer is yes. It is not known how they are doing this (is the coral animal using an active uptake system? are symbiotic bacteria in the mucus facilitating uptake?) but nonetheless they do it.
Chris Jury (MCsaxmaster)
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<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8608716#post8608716 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Shawnts106
... I also would like to know how AA help Algae? ...
Ignoring what's going on with the bacteria which inhabit the surface of either micro or macro algae for the moment, marine algae utilize amino acids as a nitrogen source. While microalgae and macroalgae do interesting things, in terms of amino acid delivery (ingestion ... not
digestion) to scleractinians, we're talking about phytoplankton, yes?
Amino Acid Uptake by Marine Phytoplankters
Patricia A. Wheeler, Barbara B. North, Grover C. Stephens
Limnology and Oceanography, Vol. 19, No. 2, pp. 249-259
March 1974
Abstract
Axenic cultures of 25 species of unicellular marine algae were tested for their ability to utilize nine common amino acids, supplied at high concentrations in batch culture, as a nitrogen source; most species were able to use several amino acids, although growth was often slower than on nitrate nitrogen. The algae were also tested for their ability to take up 14 C-labeled amino acids supplied at low, natural concentrations. In most cases, species that could grow on an amino acid at high concentration in culture could also take up amino acids at low concentrations. Uptake rates were higher in cells that had been deprived of nitrogen during growth. In some cases, uptake rates at low concentrations-if sustained-would be sufficient to support moderate growth rates. The ability to accumulate amino acids from dilute solution occurs in many phytoplankters, particularly in species that normally occur in inshore and littoral habitants.
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<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8608716#post8608716 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Shawnts106
... until I see the science ...
Hehe ... two quotes immediately leap to mind ...
"Be very, very careful what you put into that head,
because you will never, ever get it out."
- Thomas Cardinal Wolsey (1471-1530)
"The most experienced and well-informed minds are too busy still working in the trenches to take the time to write or teach to exclusion. ... Keep in mind that you are unlikely to meet such a guru on the internet at 2:00 AM. Most of the real wizards of the industry are not waiting for you with a speedy electronic reply at a moment's notice. In fact, it is more likely that the self-professed expert that has been so generously giving you electronic misinformation sits in front of his computer buck naked just like you and me. I know, I know ... I don't like to think about it either; it's sad but true."
- Anthony Calfo. Book of Coral Propagation.
Here are some links which may be helpful to folks interested in conducting their own online research expeditions ...
Subject Directories and Literature Search Engines
http://www.theaquariumcenter.com/articles/searchWeb_subjectDirectories.htm
Scirus
http://www.theaquariumcenter.com/articles/searchWeb_scirus.htm
BUBL
http://www.theaquariumcenter.com/articles/searchWeb_bubl.htm
Selected Governmental Sources
http://www.theaquariumcenter.com/articles/searchWeb_governmentalSources.htm
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8580527#post8580527 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by MCsaxmaster
... while corals do use DON like amino acids directly from solution, the Fitzgerald and Szmant paper is not getting at this fact. Instead, what that paper demonstrates is that corals appear to have a greater ability to build one amino acid from another as compared to most animals. ... It appears that many corals may be able to build all or nearly all of the normal amino acids themselves, though some amino acids may be semi-essential, that is, while a coral can produce some of a certain amino acid, it cannot build a sufficient amount without also receiving some in the diet. ...
This goes right to the heart of the matter.
Does the introduction of amino acids into the water column increase the cellular products (of the coral host) and photosynthates (of the zooxanthellae, and
perhaps of associated cyanobacteria) such that corals exhibit increased growth rates and/or enriched pigmentation?
Put another way ... can we up growth and pigmentation by artificially increasing the pool of reactants utilized by the coral-symbiote matrix (holobiont)? Clearly, the general answer is a resounding ... YES. The rub is that specific pathways, specific amino acid reactants, and specific concentration levels of reactants ...
to say nothing of specific, replicable outcomes ... remain largely undefined. It's extremely difficult to achieve anything approaching "cost effectiveness" without knowing the specifics.
This "rub" is compounded by the role that non-reactant variables play, and these variables may be far more determinant than any excess of amino acid formulations that we might introduce. Mass transfer rate is but one of the variables which immediately leaps to mind.
If you haven't read Chris Jury's (MCsaxmaster) articles on the nutrient dynamics of coral reefs in Reefkeeping Magazine, and Jake Adams' (coralite) articles on water flow in Advanced Aquarist ... they're well worth the time and effort.
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8580527#post8580527 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by MCsaxmaster
... Will adding amino acids to a tank directly provide a coral with N that it can use? Yes, it will. Will adding AAs indirectly provide usuable N due to bacterial uptake, etc., that the coral can then use? Most likely yes. Is dumping amino acids into a tank the most effective or most natural way for corals to receive N? No, probably not. Is a $10 bottle of amino acids (or whatever they cost) more effective than pureeing some seafood and adding this to the tank (pennies on the dollar)? No, probably not. ...
Indeed ... and I find the implications of this to be fascinating in terms of the future evolution of marine ornamental husbandry practices. Amino acid solution supplementation may only be an intermediary step along the pathway towards where we ultimately end up. High amino acid foods (perhaps with targeted, specific AA enrichment) may produce more cost effective results ... and provide a wide range of broader ecosystem benefits totally distinct from the effects on scleractinians.
JMO ... sorry for the length. I get
way too excited about this stuff.
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