Very funny.From your logic,if you scramble an egg it is by definition a different kind of egg.
Good lord no--that is YOUR argument. Mixing tissue of the same organism does not result in a new organism--that's they point
Seas of life narrarated by david attenburburgh gives the entire dna sequencing of all known acropora.
Considering that we have not yet sequenced the genome for even a single species of coral, much less all species of Acropora, either the film is wrong, or you misunderstood. Please watch that section of the film again as I'm almost certain they would not make such a ridiculous claim as suggesting that the genomes of all species of Acropora have been sequenced. We can amplify small sections of DNA to study relatedness, and we do that all the time in every group of organisms, not just corals. That is not remotely the same as saying that we have sequenced an organisms genome.
I cant remember the exact number of genus,species,families or what ever it is.(sorry about that).But anyways the dna shows very few varieties despite the enourmos morphological differences.
Yup, this genus shows relatively rapid evolution and speciation for corals. It's still not that fast as compared to a lot of animals, but its fast for corals. That is the point I'm sure they were trying to make in the film--there has been rapid diversification within the genus. We can tell the diversification has been rapid because variation in neutral sections of DNA is small, indicating recent divergence.
An acro. is both sexes it produces eggs and sperm in the same capsule.
Oh goodness. Most species of Acropora are hermaphroditic broadcast spawners, but not all. Some are gonochoristic and some (few) may be brooders. Of those that are hermaphroditic broadcast spawners, usually the gametes are released in egg-sperm bundles.
In fact, my advisor was the first person to successfully capture large numbers of gametes and rear large numbers of planulae from the endangered Elkhorn coral (Acropora palmata). Not to toot my own horn too loudly, but I am one of a couple dozen folks on the planet that has worked on the reproduction of this species. Our lab is one of the few that works heavily on coral reproduction. Suffice it to say, I know a thing or two about coral reproduction
So when the branches fuse together the eggs get crossed as well creating a hybrid from the very same colony.
Nope. Most corals cannot self-fertilize. Whether branches from the same colony have fused or not (this is simply a growth response) is entirely irrelevant. Even if they can self, that isn't a hybrid. A hybrid results from cross-fertilization between two species, not self-fertilization.
Thats how several hundred varities can rapidly turn into several thousand. [/B]
Nope. Asexual reproduction substantially reduces the rate of evolution, and cannot create hybrids, by definition. We have hundreds of species from perhaps a few dozen over many millions of years due to, what is for corals, rapid evolution.
And just for the record, I am finishing my master's. I haven't defended yet (though I will before too long). I shan't claim credentials I cannot yet officially claim. Having said that, just give me a few months
