Abstract
X-radiographs were made of vertical slices through the centers of 47 hermatypic coral colonies collected at Eniwetok Atoll, Marshall Islands. The image thus obtained are useful for the study of colony geometry, development, and response to damage. Comparison of radioactive inclusions of known age with previously reported cyclic skeletal density variations normal to the axis of growth confirms the annual nature of the density banding. Growth rates based on density bands and radioactivity inclusions are calculated for all 47 specimens, and measurements of the individual ‘growth bands’ are presented for 25 of them. Bulk densities measured by X-ray transmission ranged from 1.0 to 2.2 g/cm 3, with an average range of 1.3–1.6 g/cm 3. Intra-specimen skeletal densities typically vary by 10–30%; the period of high density skeletal deposition appears to coincide with the season of higher rainfall and warmer surface water at Eniwetok. Pigment residues left by boring algae are more commonly found in low density portions of the skeletons, but this distribution is believed to result from rather than cause the variations in the density of the deposited aragonite. Linear growth rates for the same specimen vary by factors of two or more from year to year, but the 25 specimens studied did not show a common pattern in the linear growth rate. Other than showing some general trends in growth as a function of species and depth, linear growth rates do not appear to be a particularly informative parameter. The density and growth rate variations are important factors in the measurement of coral growth and metabolism, and to the study of environmental controls of coral growth.
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More From: Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
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