blue-crab

User login

Powered by Drupal, an open source content management system

Upcoming Dive shows

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
6 Jul 2012 - 8 Jul 2012
Johannesburg, South Africa
7 Sep 2012 - 9 Sep 2012
Edmonton, Canada
19 Oct 2012 - 21 Oct 2012
Las Vegas, Nevada, USA
14 Nov 2012 - 17 Nov 2012
Hong Kong
15 Dec 2012 - 17 Dec 2012

Care to comment? See our FaceBook page

Shallow Water Corals Evolved From Deep Sea Ancestors

The second most diverse group of hard corals first evolved in the deep sea, and not in shallow waters.
Shallow Water Corals Evolved From Deep Sea Ancestors
 
The bubblegum coral, Paragorgia sp., in waters 150 meters deep off Adak Island, Alaska
Alberto Lindner, a coral researcher at the University of São Paulo, Brazil, and colleagues have found that Stylasterids, or lace corals, diversified in deep waters before launching at least three successful invasions of shallow water tropical habitats in the past 40 million years. This finding provides the first strong evidence that a group of deep-sea animals invaded and diversified in shallow waters.

“When we look at the DNA and fossils of these animals, we can trace how these transitions from deep water to shallow habitats have popped up in different parts of the family at different points in time,†says Alberto Lindner.

“We also see this story unfold in which the corals are building skeletal defenses, possibly in a long-running arms-race with their predators. Together, it shows us how wrong it is to think of deep-sea ecosystems as being isolated and static.â€
 
Although deep-sea research is often difficult and expensive, Lindner and his colleagues hope their work will further inspire scientific exploration and broad evolutionary studies in the oceans

The deep sea and the shallow-water tropics are the most diverse environments in the oceans, but how deep and shallow-water species have built these different marine habitats is still poorly understood. Our study shows that integrating deep-sea and shallow-water species in evolutionary studies is key to understanding the evolution of life in the oceans.

â–º
Advertisement
-