학술논문

Effects of light dynamics on coral spawning synchrony
Document Type
Report
Source
The Biological Bulletin. June 1, 2011, Vol. 220 Issue 3, p161, 13 p.
Subject
United States
Language
English
ISSN
0006-3185
Abstract
Synchrony of spawning in many hermatypic corals, typically a few nights after the full moon, is putatively dependent on solar and lunar light cycles in conjunction with other possible cues such as tides and temperature. We analyze here the contributions of separate components of light dynamics, because the effects of twilight and lunar skylight on coral spawning synchrony have previously been conflated and the alternative hypothesis that these components have differential contributions as proximate cues has not been tested. Moonlight-dependent changes in spectra during twilight, rates of decreasing twilight intensities, and changes in lunar photoperiod were experimentally decoupled using programmed light-emitting diodes and compared for their separate effects on spawning synchrony in Acropora humilis. Effects on synchrony under the control of synthetic lunar cues were greatest in response to changes in lunar photoperiod; changes in light intensities and spectra had lesser influence. No significant differences among treatment responses were found at the circa-diel time scale. We conclude that spawning synchrony on a particular lunar night and specific time of night is a threshold response to differential periods of darkness after twilight that is primarily influenced by lunar photoperiod and secondarily by discrete optical components of early nocturnal illumination.
Introduction Spawning synchrony by gamete-broadcasting marine invertebrates is a complex phenomenon that is essential to maximize species-specific reproductive success, enhance larval recruitment (Knowlton et al, 1997; Levitan et al, 2004), [...]