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Coral calcification: use of radioactive isotopes and metabolic inhibitors to study the interactions with photosynthesis and respiration. Al-Horani, F. A.; Al-Rousan, S. A.; Manasrah, R. S.; Rasheed, M. Y. Marine Science Station, Aqaba, Jordan. Chemistry and Ecology (2005), 21(5), 325-335.
Abstract
In order to characterize the process of calcification in scleractinian corals, a series of lab. expts. were conducted using radioactive isotopes. Labeled calcium, bicarbonate and glucose were used and the fates of the labeled tracers were followed in the skeleton and the tissue fractions of the coral Galaxea fascicularis. In addn., a variety of metabolic inhibitors were used to test the effects of various enzymes and processes on the incorporation rates. The incorporation rate of 45Ca into the coral skeleton decreased to about one-fifth upon inhibition of metabolic respiration by the specific inhibitor NaCN suggesting a major role of metabolic respiration in coral calcification, and decreased to one-half upon inhibition of carbonic anhydrase by the specific inhibitor acetazolamide indicating a role of the enzyme in the process. The results obtained have also shown that corals are able to incorporate carbon from seawater bicarbonate and added glucose in both skeleton and tissue fractions. The process of incorporation was influenced by light conditions, carbonic anhydrase, respiration and photosynthesis. The incorporation rate of 14C-HCO-3 was reduced to about one-tenth in the skeleton, and one-fifth in the tissue, upon inhibition of carbonic anhydrase suggesting a major influence of the enzyme in the incorporation process. The inhibition of photosynthesis had more influence on the tissue incorporation rate of the tracer than the skeleton suggesting that photosynthesis is the main process responsible for tissue use of seawater bicarbonate in the coral. 14C-glucose incorporation into the skeleton was mainly affected by NaCN addn. and to a lesser extent by dichlorophenyldimethylurea (DCMU) addn., while the tissue fraction was mainly affected by NaCN addn. It was concluded that respiration and photosynthesis, in addn.
to the enzyme carbonic anhydrase, are limiting factors for the process of calcification in the coral, and that various forms and sources of carbon can be used in coral calcification and tissue growth.
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Understanding and reading is one of the best instrument we humans have, use it and become a higher being, ignorance is not bliss
I grow my corals out of baking soda and icemelt =D
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