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RE: SEMINAR: RE: MBF 602 Student Seminar Series Presents Rachel Silverstein Friday 11/12 4:00p
| From: | "Sidney Hartley" <shartley@rsmas.miami.edu> |
| Subject: | RE: SEMINAR: RE: MBF 602 Student Seminar Series Presents Rachel Silverstein Friday 11/12 4:00p |
| Date: | Thu, 11 Nov 2010 10:22:40 -0500 |
|
MBF 602
Student Seminar Series Presents Rachel Silverstein Friday 11/12 4:00p in the S/A seminar room Assessing cryptic symbiont
diversity using high sensitivity molecular techniques Reef-building corals
obligately host dinoflagellate endosymbionts (genus Symbiodinium) which
they depend on for photosynthetic energy and rapid calcification. Molecular
surveys have shown that only ~25% of coral species are capable of hosting
multiple Symbiodinium types. However, these surveys have relatively low
resolving power (i.e., are only able to detect symbionts that represent
~5-50% of the total population). Here, we applied high-resolution real-time PCR
(100-1,000 times more sensitive than previous techniques) to detect Symbiodinium
from the 4 most common symbiont clades found in scleractinian corals (A-D). We
surveyed 39 coral species from reefs worldwide, including 26 coral species
thought (based on previous molecular surveys) to be restricted to hosting a
single symbiont taxon, as well as 13 coral species known to host multiple
symbiont taxa. We detected Symbiodinium in clades C and D in all 39
species tested, and found that most (54%) of the 26 coral species thought to be
“symbiotic specialists” in fact hosted symbionts from all 4 of the Symbiodinium
clades tested, demonstrating
that the ability to associate with multiple symbiont types is not limited to a
minority of coral taxa. These findings suggest that all reef
coral species may be physiologically capable of undergoing adaptive changes in
their symbiont communities in response to environmental stressors, but there
may be a gradient in their ability to do so. Rachel Nora Silverstein Entered MBF Ph.D. Program Fall 2007 Graduate May 2006 with B.A. in Ecology, Evolution and
Environmental Biology from Columbia University Advisor: Andrew C. Baker
Sidney L.S. Hartley University of Miami RSMAS Division of Marine Biology and Fisheries S. Grosvenor 315 Miami Fl 33149 305-421-4176 305-421-4600-fax |
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- SEMINAR: RE: MBF 602 Student Seminar Series Presents Rachel Silverstein Friday 11/15 4:00p
- From: "Sidney Hartley" <shartley@rsmas.miami.edu>
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