Video about coral mutations on TED

Mangodude

The Clown Tang Keeper!
I'm trying to find a video I saw about a month or so ago on TED to write a college term paper on it. From what I recall, the man giving the speech was snorkeling in Biscayne bay in Miami when he found a species of hard coral (native to florida/Caribbean) living in an intertidal, dirty, temp-swinging, dredged portion of the bay, a little more than a few hundred yards from a hotel. Either he hypothesized or he verified that it had a genetic mutation/evolution of some sort that allowed it to live in such crazy conditions and that perhaps this might be the answer to a lot of Florida's coral problems. The problem was that because it was genetically different then any of Florida's protected hard corals, it was not subject to all the usual legal protections.

Does anyone else remember this or am I the only one?

I checked ted's site and couldn't find it..

Thank you!
 
Probably thinking of the hardy hybrid Acro that was found in Government Cut. The big shipping channel that leads from Port of Miami into the open ocean.

<iframe width="425" height="350" frameborder="0" scrolling="no" marginheight="0" marginwidth="0" src="https://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&source=s_q&hl=en&geocode=&q=Government+Cut,+Miami-Dade,+FL&aq=0&oq=government+cut,+&sll=25.762175,-80.134621&sspn=0.100953,0.110378&t=h&ie=UTF8&hq=&hnear=Government+Cut&ll=25.766736,-80.141463&spn=0.100954,0.110378&z=13&output=embed"></iframe><br /><small><a href="https://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&source=embed&hl=en&geocode=&q=Government+Cut,+Miami-Dade,+FL&aq=0&oq=government+cut,+&sll=25.762175,-80.134621&sspn=0.100953,0.110378&t=h&ie=UTF8&hq=&hnear=Government+Cut&ll=25.766736,-80.141463&spn=0.100954,0.110378&z=13" style="color:#0000FF;text-align:left">View Larger Map</a></small>
 
Interesting. I would encourage you to look through Veron's "Corals of the World" Many species of so called "SPS" do not live in what would be considered pristine reef environments. Looking at the habitats just for the Acropora genus you'll find species living in mutually exclusive environments. Surprisingly, one of the more extreme examples is Poccilopora damicornis which is found in mangrove swamps.
 
I've seen all the TED's that cover oceans, etc, and I don't remember seeing that one.

Also I have the Corals Of The World, and was also going to say how it shows hard corals doing fine in lagoons, etc. And it makes sense when you read research about water quality there: the higher phytoplankton content filters the water more, and provides more for the food particle chain.
 
You need to research water quality and general conditions of specific lagoons before expecting corals to do well in lagoons in general. In the northern half of the tidal estuarine lagoon called Biscayne Bay conditions are not hospitable to Acroporid corals in the least with the exception of a very few spots, namely right around the mouths of inlets such as Government Cut or Haulover Cut to the north. All of 2.5 nautical miles to the inside of the Government Cut is the mouth of the Miami River...no coral there, yet it's sill part of the lagoon system ;)
 
Speaking of Biscayne, a really informative study can be found by googling "Nutrients in the Biscayne Bay of Miami".

Note1: The author of this study is unknown; this is just Chapter 5 of the study

Note2: Halimeda and Penicillus have roots; Drift algae does not.

This is a good overall study to learn about how different levels of nutrients affect algae. It's not too complex because it is just a thesis (not a research paper), and does not get into nucleotides, tracers, sequences, or math. Of interest:

Figure 8

Figure 15 ("C" is control)

Comments starting from PDF page 59 (text page 194)......

"the macroalgal community can respond rapidly and sensitively with changing species composition at lower nutrient levels than are typically measured in water samples in nutrient-poor tropical regions (Fong et al. 1994a; McCook 1999). Thus, traditional methods of monitoring water-column nutrients to predict changes in algal community structure may not be warranted (Fong et al. 1994a, 2001), as there is usually little correlation between water-column N and P and either productivity or abundance of primary producers (McCook 1999; Fong et al. 2001)."

"Monitoring the concentration of nutrients within the tissue of macroalgae may be a more useful integrated indicator of long-term enrichment in the environment (Fong et al. 1994a, 1998, 2001). Further, monitoring of macrophyte tissue nutrients to detect enrichment could occur at less frequent intervals than monitoring of water-column nutrients. In this dissertation I found that algae from canal-influenced sites had higher tissue N:P elemental ratios, indicative of higher N-loadings, than the same species from sites that were not impacted by elevated nutrients."

"Rapid cycling of nutrients within the drift [algal] mats may be an important mechanism by which high standing crops can be maintained, even when external concentrations may appear to be limiting."

"nutrient availability based on water-column N and P-concentrations may be poor indicators of limitation, because storage by macroalgae introduces time lags between high water-column concentrations and algal growth. Macroalgae can take up so much N, that water quality seems high even under high N-loading [high N-flux]"

"Water-column nutrients (NO3- and NH4+) are elevated at canal-influenced sites compared to sheet-flow and oceanic sites. Growth and photosynthesis of the three functional groups [Halimeda, Penicillus; Drift] were stimulated by the addition of N, but not P, in experimental microcosms. Analyses of tissue nutrients indicated P is the limiting nutrient. Tissue nutrient contents ranged from 1-4% N, and 0.01-0.2% P, by dry weight, yielding N:P elemental ratios ranging from 12:1-250:1. Growth and photosynthesis were influenced by seasonal light and temperature effects > salinity effects > nutrient addition. The chemical and physical effects of canal discharges on macroalgal physiology appear to be complex, and may require further investigation. Macroalgae play important roles in energy transfer and nutrient recycling in coastal and estuarine areas that have complex seaweed communities."
 
Please provide the proper citation and link to the paper. I've yet to see a thesis that didn't have the students name attached it.
 
Here's a good paper describing nutrient loading and Biscayne Bay's circulation dynamics in respect to the nutrient loading. It's by Caccia and Boyer.
 
I found that thesis/study as an independent chapter, and could not find a name attached. Seemed to be lost in a file on a school server somewhere. Got tired of looking, but it was worded simply so I like to use it. I'll have to take a look at the one you posted.
 
Back
Top