alt
2012-02-17 19:34

Corals inflate to escape being buried alive in sand



Coral might appear solid and inanimate, but surprising new footage of a mushroom coral inflating itself to escape a sandy burial has brought the organism to life, BBC Nature reported Thursday.

A scientist from the University of Queensland used timelapse photography to capture the footage.

It was already known that the species could release itself from the sandy seabed, but it was not clear how.

Since corals move so slowly, time-lapse imagery was used to find out.

Dr Pim Bongaerts captured the footage and published his findings in the journal Coral Reef.

As sandy sediments shift on the seabed, corals need to breathe and prevent themselves from being smothered.

"Sedimentation presents a major threat for corals, as they can become covered in a layer of sand from which they are unable to escape," explained Dr Bongaerts.

To find out how mushroom corals - a particularly mobile family of corals - did this, the researcher brought specimens into the lab and put them in aquaria in order to film the process.

"I covered the corals in sediment and, from that moment on, started photographing them every 10 seconds for 20 hours," Dr Bongaerts said.

Unlike many of the more familiar branching and "staghorn-type" corals, mushroom corals have a relatively thick layer of fleshy tissue on top of their tough calcium carbonate skeleton.
Dr Bongaerts explained: "Many of them live on the sand bed and have quite a unique lifestyle.

"Most corals are attached to the limestone substrate that makes up the reef, but mushroom corals can actively move around and find themselves better habitats."

To move around, the corals "inflate and deflate" parts of their body. And, as the footage that Dr Bongaerts captured showed, they use a similar technique to free themselves from a covering of sand.

"The corals inflate and deflate their entire body in a series of rhythmic pulses," said Dr Bongaerts, "which allows them to effectively shed the sediment in a matter of hours.

"It's so crazy to see; it looks like another type of creature entirely."

He says that the idea of using time-lapse came from watching natural history documentaries.

"People often don't have the concept that corals are animals," he said. "But this really brings them to life."

"It's surprising that they're capable of such controlled movements."






관련 한글 기사


산호, 생매장 피하려 몸 부풀려

무생물처럼 한 자리에 붙박혀 있는 것으로 보이는 산호가 모래에 파묻힐 지경이 되면 이를 피해 몸을 부풀리는 것으로 밝혀졌다고 BBC 뉴스가 16일 보도했다.

호주 퀸즐랜드 대학 연구진은 저속 카메라로 버섯산호의 움직임을 관찰한 결과 이런 현상을 발견했다고 `산호초' 저널 최신호에 발표했다.

버섯산호가 호흡을 위해 모래 무더기에서 빠져 나온다는 사실은 이미 알려진 것이지만 어떤 방식으로 그렇게 하는지 밝혀지기는 처음이다.

연구진은 버섯산호 표본을 실험실로 가져와 수조에 넣고 모래로 덮은 뒤 10초 단위로 20시간동안 촬영했다.

사슴뿔처럼 생긴 산호들과 달리 버섯산호는 단단한 탄산칼슘질 골격 윗부분이 비교적 두꺼운 살집 같은 조직으로 덮여 있다. 또 대부분의 산호가 산호초를 형성하는 석회석에 붙어 있는데 반해 버섯산호는 돌아다니면서 더 좋은 조건의 서식처를 찾는 것으로 나타났다.

이처럼 돌아다니기 위해 버섯산호는 신체 부위들을 "부풀리거나 오므리는" 것으로 알려져 있으며 연구진의 비디오에서는 이런 기술을 이용해 덮고 있는 모래를 헤치고 나오는 것으로 밝혀졌다.

연구진은 "이 산호는 일련의 리드미컬한 맥박에 따라 몸 전체를 부풀리기도 하고 오므리기도 한다"면서 "이런 동작으로 몇 시간 안에 모래를 털어 버린다"고 밝혔다.

이들은 "산호가 동물이라는 사실을 모르는 사람들이 많지만 모래가 덮이는 상황이 오면 이들은 살아 움직인다"고 말했다.


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