Javascript must be enabled to continue!
The Effect of Pollen on Coral Health
View through CrossRef
Corals are facing a range of threats, including rises in sea surface temperature and ocean acidification. Some now argue that keeping corals ex situ (in aquaria), may be not only important but necessary to prevent local extinction, for example in the Florida Reef Tract. Such collections or are already becoming common place, especially in the Caribbean, and may act as an ark, preserving and growing rare or endangered species in years to come. However, corals housed in aquaria face their own unique set of threats. For example, hobbyists (who have housed corals for decades) have noticed seasonal mortality is commonplace, incidentally following months of peak pollen production. So, could corals suffer from hay fever? If so, what does the future hold? In short, the answer to the first question is simple, and it is no, corals cannot suffer from hay fever, primarily because corals lack an adaptive immune system, which is necessary for the diagnosis of such an allergy. However, the threat from pollen could still be real. In this review, we explore how such seasonal mortality could play out. We explore increases in reactive oxygen species, the role of additional nutrients and how the microbiome of the pollen may introduce disease or cause dysbiosis in the holobiont.
Title: The Effect of Pollen on Coral Health
Description:
Corals are facing a range of threats, including rises in sea surface temperature and ocean acidification.
Some now argue that keeping corals ex situ (in aquaria), may be not only important but necessary to prevent local extinction, for example in the Florida Reef Tract.
Such collections or are already becoming common place, especially in the Caribbean, and may act as an ark, preserving and growing rare or endangered species in years to come.
However, corals housed in aquaria face their own unique set of threats.
For example, hobbyists (who have housed corals for decades) have noticed seasonal mortality is commonplace, incidentally following months of peak pollen production.
So, could corals suffer from hay fever? If so, what does the future hold? In short, the answer to the first question is simple, and it is no, corals cannot suffer from hay fever, primarily because corals lack an adaptive immune system, which is necessary for the diagnosis of such an allergy.
However, the threat from pollen could still be real.
In this review, we explore how such seasonal mortality could play out.
We explore increases in reactive oxygen species, the role of additional nutrients and how the microbiome of the pollen may introduce disease or cause dysbiosis in the holobiont.
Related Results
The Patient's Hay-fever diary: users feedback can improve pollen information
The Patient's Hay-fever diary: users feedback can improve pollen information
<p><em>Background: </em>Pollen information is crucial for effective preventive behaviour of pollen allergy sufferers. In addition to the r...
Modelling regime shifts of coral reefs to sponge reefs
Modelling regime shifts of coral reefs to sponge reefs
<p>Coral reef ecosystems have been degrading globally for decades due to global climate change and anthropogenic pressure, and corals are expected to continue declining in th...
Benthic foraminifera associated to cold-water coral ecosystems
Benthic foraminifera associated to cold-water coral ecosystems
Cold-water coral reef ecosystems occur worldwide and are especially developed along the European margin, from northern Norway to the Gulf of Cadiz and into the Western Mediterranea...
Phytochemical and Bioactivity Studies on Hedera helix L. (Ivy) Flower Pollen and Ivy Bee Pollen
Phytochemical and Bioactivity Studies on Hedera helix L. (Ivy) Flower Pollen and Ivy Bee Pollen
Bee pollen, known as a ‘life-giving dust’, is a product of honeybees using flower pollen grains and combining them with their saliva secretions. Thus, flower pollen could be an ind...
Nutrient gradients simulate different adjustments of coral-algal symbiosis
Nutrient gradients simulate different adjustments of coral-algal symbiosis
Abstract
Background: Eutrophication is one of the major causes of coral reef degradation but the effect of eutrophication on coral and its symbiont algae remains unclear, p...
KOMPARASI POLA SPASIAL KONDISI TERUMBU KARANG TAMAN NASIONAL KARIMUNJAWA
KOMPARASI POLA SPASIAL KONDISI TERUMBU KARANG TAMAN NASIONAL KARIMUNJAWA
ABSTRACTComparative studies on the percentage of coral reef substrate cover have been carried out in 3 (three) management zones (protection zone, utilization and Non-MPA) Karimunja...
Influence of Saharan-Sahel dust outbreaks on pollen exposure in the Iberian Mediterranean areas
Influence of Saharan-Sahel dust outbreaks on pollen exposure in the Iberian Mediterranean areas
<p>Airborne particulate matter such as mineral dust comes mainly from natural sources, and the arid regions of Sahara and Sahel in Africa release large amounts of the...
Effect of Coral Reefs on Wave Height
Effect of Coral Reefs on Wave Height
Coral reefs, among other benefits, provide natural protection from waves for coastal communities. In the context of climate change and its role in the degradation of coral reefs an...

