<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13318204#post13318204 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by hahnmeister
As for the data on blue light (UV-A in particular), you would have to ask Dana I believe. It came up in conversation/emails with him.
Hmmm, but UV-A isn’t blue light. It’s invisible to us, hence it has no color. However, it is nearest deep violet, not blue. Again though, I’d have to see the data to entertain the notion that blue light causes measurably more photoinhibition in corals than red or green of the same intensity.
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13318204#post13318204 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by hahnmeister
Althouth light intensity in nature varies throughout the day and rarely does in captivity, the total amount of light absorbed as far as the coral is concerned is the same... that is why total exposure throughout the day, if constantly varying or not, is simply summed up... much like charging a battery. So all you do is sum up every second of light intensity and add it to the total just the same. Without getting into the integral calc, lets say you had a coral that gets a peak intensity of 1000 at noon (or shortly after), and less and less as you go either forward or back in time until 6am or pm. This total per hour may average out to say... 300 micromol/m2/s... and if you have that coral under light that is 300 for 12 hours a day...
Nnnnoo, no no, that’s not how photosynthesis works. That would only work if the organism were at low light intensity (subsaturating) for the entire day. The photosynthetic response under a naturally varying light cycle due to solar precession is not the same as it is under constant light intensity. A coral exposed to 12 hrs of light at 300 umol photons/m2/s would probably be near the point of photosaturation, but for most corals wouldn’t be getting nearly enough light to cause significant photoinhibition. A coral exposed to a max intensity of 1000 umol photons/m2/s is going to be photoinhibited during that day. During the early morning and late evening it will be well undersaturated with light. NPP, GPP, photodamage, etc. will all be different between these scenarios.
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13318204#post13318204 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by hahnmeister
the photosynthetic response would be just the same, as its really just storing up for its night cycle to actually process that carbon.
Huh? What do you mean waiting for the night cycle to process the carbon? Why would they wait for night to utilize the carbon they’ve fixed?
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13318204#post13318204 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by hahnmeister
Likewise, if you had light levels of 400 for 9 hours a day, it would get just as much.
Think about that though: you’re saying that production (e.g., NPP) is governed simply by the number of photons the corals are exposed to per day. So, at 300 umol photons/m2/s X 3600 s/hr X 12 hrs/day = 12.96 mol photons/m2/day. If we ramp up the intensity substantially and adjust down the photoperiod we can get the same number of photons hitting the corals with intensity of 3000 umol photons/m2/s for 1.2 hrs. If we expose the corals to light intensity 150% the intensity of unfiltered sun, do you think they’re going to do well? We can easily get that sort of light technology out of specialty bulbs, should we be doing that? No, were we to try that, the corals would fry during those 1.2 hrs.
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13318204#post13318204 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by hahnmeister
The pigments would no doubt respond differently to protect the coral from the different peak levels of intensity, but otherwise its just 'charging the batteries'.
No, that’s not how photosynthesis works.
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13318204#post13318204 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by hahnmeister
This buildup of carbon is nitrogen limited though, and so most corals just shed their excess carbon in the form of slime because they are nitrogen limited (a coral that gets 160% of its daily carbon from light will shed 60% through slime production because it cant store the rest until the next day).
Nnnooo, carbon fixation is only N-limited to the extent that N-limitation could reduce the production of photosynthetic reaction centers and/or associated proteins. Corals lose a lot of photosynthetically fixed carbon in mucus, but that’s no reason to think that they are using mucus production simply as a mechanism to dump excess fixed carbon. They lose a lot of fixed carbon to gametes too. Should we suggest that gamete production is a means to simply purge excess carbon?
In addition, corals tend to eat a fair amount in nature. Counting photosynthetically fixed carbon AND carbon intake from feeding, most corals are getting 200-300% of their daily metabolic expenditure worth of energy per day. Of that 200-300%, 100% goes to metabolism, about 50-100% goes to mucus production, and the rest goes to gametet production, growth, defense, tissue repair, etc.
Why wouldn’t they be able to store that fixed carbon until the next day?
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13318204#post13318204 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by hahnmeister
Tom Wyatt and Borneman were talking about it all weekend with their lectures on coral nutrition and coral chemistry (internal chemistry pathways more like it). I believe those lecture notes will be posted. But corals are nitrogen limited, and so simply blasting them with more and more light does little. You want to really boost growth? Provide more flow and feed like mad. Borneman's lecture was interesting, and Tom referenced it several times since they were related and had many parallels. We dont feed nearly as much or as well as we should.
Blasting them with more light does little good IF they are already photosaturated. Corals that grow at depth where light availability is low grow much, much more slowly than those in shallow water. It’s not an either or sort of thing though: corals that receive ample light, food, etc. grow fast. Those that don’t…don’t. I’d be the first to agree that most corals are woefully underfed in captivity though.
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13318204#post13318204 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by hahnmeister
But as far as the 'mucus', Tom's talk mentioned that it may be for protection, but mostly to shed the coral's excess energy in the case of excess light (suggesting that many corals get too much light and that is how they shed that energy).
1) What would be the purpose of wasting huge amounts of energy-rich food?
2) Where’s the evidence? Corals lose a lot of N in their mucus too, not just C. If mucus production is a mechanism for dumping excess fixed carbon, then why is their so much investment in it in terms of N, specialized proteins, etc.?
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13318204#post13318204 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by hahnmeister
Also, that the stony skeleton isnt so much an evolutionary adaptation for structure, but that the formation of calcium around the polyps is more for food storage, since the carbonate can be converted back to a carbon source.
Oh
reaaally? Well, since my MS deals heavily with skeletogenesis in corals, I’d be very interested to hear how or why the skeleton is used as a repository for inorganic carbon
Chris