Mutualism Coral polyps, animals, and
zooxanthellae, being single-celled organisms, have a
mutualistic relationship, where each organism benefit from each other. Through this relationship,
Pavona duerdeni get their photosynthetically fixed carbon needed to achieve their needed respiratory requirements. The algal symbiosis with the dinoflagellates leads to photosynthetic production by these symbioses, largely responsible for the life and growth of tropical reef communities. When corals are presented with diverse stress-inducing situations, polyps expel the algal cells and they take on a white appearance, causing "coral bleaching". When the coral reaches the "bleached" stage, they have lost all their
zooxanthellae cells.
Reproduction As part of the Anthozoa class,
Pavona duerdeni, releases spawning-eggs and sperm into the water columns simultaneously. After fertilization, it develops into a
planula larvae, with a solid, flattened body using cilia to prevail as free-swimming larvae, further transported by the aid of surface currents. Once the larvae are fully developed, they will settle on the seabed and attach to the substrate, eventually growing into coral polyps. The corals, being
hermatypic, will build reefs by depositing hard, calcareous material to form large structures. With time the coral will reach the status of massive coral, creating boulder-sized formations, for the support of life around and within them.
Threats White Plague Disease, is a virus first observed in the 1970’s killing coral tissue, thus responsible for major reef declines worldwide. Corals affected by the plague experience a rapid loss of tissue, leaving with an identifiable line of white in the middle. The white line typically found in the middle of the coral divides the colored, algal-colonized, living sections.
Pavona duerdeni have experienced grave loss due to the plague off the coast of Thailand, along with other
Pavona species. Contributing to habit loss for reef-associated organisms
Pavona duerdeni is affected by diverse challenges reefs face today. Seawater temperature changing as a result of climate change cause stress on the coral. When temperatures are too high, the relationship between corals and their symbiotic
microalgae breaks down. This leads to "
coral bleaching", where when the increase in water temperature is significant, then the corals expel the zooxanthellae living in their tissues, causing then the coral to turn completely white, thus "bleaching".
Ocean acidification also has adverse effects on the ocean, for when seawater absorbs some of the excess CO2 from the atmosphere, then this causes the ocean to become more acidic. These acidic conditions dissolve coral skeletons, which make up the structure of the reef, and make it more difficult for corals to grow and reproduce, threatening their existence. == References ==