Symbiotic Relationship Between Coral and Algae

Coral and Zooxanthellae Need Each Other to Survive

3 Comments
Join the Conversation
Corals Rely on Algae - earl53
Corals Rely on Algae - earl53
Corals and zooxanthellae algae depend on each other for survival in a symbiotic relationship called mutualism.

The large structures people see and think of as coral are actually made up of thousands of coral organisms called coral polyps and the skeletons their predecessors have left behind. Corals are animals, but many kinds of coral depend on plants for survival. The plant so many corals need is a single-celled algae called zooxanthellae, that lives within the polyp. This symbiotic relationship, where two species benefit each other, is known as mutualism.

Corals Depend on Algae Photosynthesis

Algae offer corals the byproducts of their photosynthesis, which is why deep-water corals have no use for algae. However, virtually all tropical reef-building corals rely on zooxanthellae. The NOAA describes coral feeding behavior in their “Coral Reef Biology” page, on the Coral Reef Information System (CoRIS) website. In the coral algae symbiotic relationship the zooxanthellae fix large amounts of carbon through photosynthesis and pass on the carbon to the coral in the form of glycerol or glucose. These chemicals provide the coral with the energy and building blocks it needs to function. Scientists estimate that, depending on the species, corals receive 50% to 95% of their energy from this photosynthetic process.

In This Mutualism Coral Provide Algae Nutrients and a Place to Live

In the coral-algae mutualism the algae receive a place to live. “Coral Reef Biology” describes how most zooxanthellae live in the coral polyp’s tentacles and gastrodermal cells in the digestive tract.

Corals do not receive all their nutrients from algae. Many corals catch prey at night, using their tentacles to catch zooplankton and bring it to their mouths. This prey provides the polyps with nitrogen, an essential element needed for functioning. The polyp passes some of the nitrogen along to the algae, which also requires this element.

Global Warming is Affecting the Coral-Algae Symbiosis

In her April 2003 article “Coral bleaching –will global warming kill the reefs?”, Vanessa Woods describes how higher water temperatures force corals to kick out their indispensable algae. Warmer water temperatures block a photosynthetic reaction in algae that’s necessary for converting carbon dioxide into sugar. This causes a poisonous build-up in the algae which threatens the polyp. The polyp reacts by forcing out the zooxanthellae. Since the algae is actually responsible for the coral’s color, its exit causes the coral to turn a bleached white. Corals can recover if cooler temperatures return, but if they don’t the corals slowly starve to death without their zooxanthellae.

Coral reefs are not only beautiful, they are an important part of the ecosystem. Many fisheries and thus the diets of many people rely on the health of coral reefs. It is thus important to ensure the coral-zooxanthellae symbiosis continues.

This is me!, Megan Jungwi

Megan Jungwi - Megan Jungwi started her freelance writing career in March 2009. Although new to online writing Megan has long been passionate about the ...

rss
Advertisement
Leave a comment

NOTE: Because you are not a Suite101 member, your comment will be moderated before it is viewable.
Submit
What is 3+1?

Comments

Jun 5, 2009 5:04 AM
Guest :
Very Helpful!
Feb 4, 2010 1:32 PM
Guest :
We skelekians find that these comments about your planet earth to be sad. On the planet Skelekia, the whole world is healthy. You earthlings would do well to take care of your planet.

Korylewqa Bivshikria!
Tak Creklia, President of Skelekia
Sep 8, 2010 9:30 AM
Guest :
Excellent!
3 Comments
Advertisement
Advertisement