Abstract

The high morphological resemblance between branching corals and trees, can lead to comparative studies on pattern formation traits, best exemplified in plants and in some cnidarians. Here, 81 branches of similar size of the hermatypic coral Stylophora pistillata were lopped of three different genets, their skeletons marked with alizarin red-S, and divided haphazardly into three morphometric treatment groups: (I) upright position; (II) horizontal position, intact tip; and (III) horizontal position, cut tip. After 1 y of in-situ growth, the 45 surviving ramets were brought to the laboratory, their tissues removed and their architectures analyzed by 22 morphological parameters (MPs). We found that within 1 y, isolated branches developed into small coral colonies by growing new branches from all branch termini, in all directions. No architectural dissimilarity was assigned among the three studied genets of treatment I colonies. However, a major architectural disparity between treatment I colonies and colonies of treatments II and III was documented as the development of mirror structures from both sides of treatments II and III settings as compared to tip-borne architectures in treatment I colonies. We did not observe apical dominance since fragments grew equally from all branch sides without documented dominant polarity along branch axis. In treatment II colonies, no MP for new branches originating either from tips or from branch bases differed significantly. In treatment III colonies, growth from the cut tip areas was significantly lower compared to the base, again, suggesting lack of apical dominance in this species. Changes in branch polarity revealed genet associated plasticity, which in one of the studied genets, led to enhanced growth. Different genets exhibited canalization flexibility of growth patterns towards either lateral growth, or branch axis extension (skeletal weight and not porosity was measured). This study revealed that colony astogeny in S. pistillata is a regulated process expressed through programmed events and not directly related to simple energy trade-off principles or to environmental conditions, and that branch polarity and apical dominance do not dictate colony astogeny. Therefore, plasticity and astogenic disparities encompass a diversity of genetic (fixed and flexible) induced responses.

Highlights

  • In multicellular organisms, the level of integration among bodily components dictates the final functional performance of the entire organism [1,2,3,4,5]

  • The level of integration among bodily components dictates the final functional performance of the entire organism [1,2,3,4,5]. This is highlighted in a number of sessile modular organisms like trees [6,7] and a range of marine invertebrate taxa [8,9,10,11,12] sharing similar morphometric traits [4,13], which produce morphological complexities endowed with sets of ecological advantages when compared to unitary organisms [14]

  • Whereas the scientific literature often deals with differences in morphologies in branching types [23,24], very little attention is given to astogeny rules [18,19,25,26,27], including the impacts of positional value through tip dominance and branch polarity

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Summary

Introduction

The level of integration among bodily components dictates the final functional performance of the entire organism [1,2,3,4,5]. This is highlighted in a number of sessile modular organisms like trees [6,7] and a range of marine invertebrate taxa [8,9,10,11,12] sharing similar morphometric traits [4,13], which produce morphological complexities endowed with sets of ecological advantages when compared to unitary organisms [14]. Whereas the scientific literature often deals with differences in morphologies in branching types [23,24], very little attention is given to astogeny rules [18,19,25,26,27], including the impacts of positional value through tip dominance and branch polarity

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