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Coralline algae

Coralline algae are red algae in the order Corallinales. They are characterized by a thallus that is hard because of calcareous deposits contained within the cell walls. The colors of these algae are most typically pink, or some other shade of red, but some species can be purple, yellow, blue, white, or gray-green. Coralline algae play an important role in the ecology of coral reefs. Sea urchins, parrot fish, and limpets and chitons (both mollusks) feed on coralline algae. In the temperate Mediterranean Sea, coralline algae are the main builders of a typical algal reef, the Coralligène ("coralligenous").[5] Many are typically encrusting and rock-like, found in marine waters all over the world. Only one species lives in freshwater.[6] Unattached specimens (maerl, rhodoliths) may form relatively smooth compact balls to warty or fruticose thalli.

Coralline algae
Temporal range: Ordovician–recent[1][2][3]
Spongites yendoi together with the gardening limpet Scutellastra cochlear
Scientific classification
(unranked): Archaeplastida
Division: Rhodophyta
Class: Florideophyceae
Subclass: Corallinophycidae
Order: Corallinales
Silva & Johansen, 1986[4]
Families and subfamilies

A close look at almost any intertidal rocky shore or coral reef will reveal an abundance of pink to pinkish-grey patches, distributed throughout the rock surfaces. These patches of pink "paint" are actually living crustose coralline red algae. The red algae belong to the division Rhodophyta, within which the coralline algae form the order Corallinales. There are over 1600 described species of nongeniculate coralline algae.[7]

The corallines are presently grouped into two families on the basis of their reproductive structures.[8]

Distribution edit

Coralline algae are widespread in all of the world's oceans, where they often cover close to 100% of rocky substrata. Only one species, Pneophyllum cetinaensis, is found in freshwater. Its ancestor lived in brackish water, and was already adapted to osmotic stress and rapid changes in water salinity and temperature.[6][9] Many are epiphytic (grow on other algae or marine angiosperms), or epizoic (grow on animals), and some are even parasitic on other corallines.

Forms edit

Corallines have been divided into two groups, although this division does not constitute a taxonomic grouping:

  • the geniculate (articulated) corallines;
  • the nongeniculate (nonarticulated) corallines.

Geniculate corallines are branching, tree-like organisms which are attached to the substratum by crustose or calcified, root-like holdfasts. The organisms are made flexible by having noncalcified sections (genicula) separating longer calcified sections (intergenicula). Nongeniculate corallines range from a few micrometres to several centimetres thick crusts. They are often very slow growing, and may occur on rock, coral skeletons, shells, other algae or seagrasses. Crusts may be thin and leafy to thick and strongly adherent. Some are parasitic or partly endophytic on other corallines. Many coralline crusts produce knobby protuberances ranging from a millimetre to several centimetres high. Some are free-living as rhodoliths (rounded, free-living specimens). The morphological complexity of rhodoliths enhances species diversity, and can be used as a non-taxonomic descriptor for monitoring.[10]

Thalli can be divided into three layers: the hypothallus, perithallus and epithallus.[11] The epithallus is periodically shed, either in sheets or piecemeal.[12]

Habitat edit

Corallines live in varying depths of water, ranging from periodically exposed intertidal settings to 270 m water depth (around the maximum penetration of light).[13] Some species can tolerate brackish[13] or hypersaline[14] waters, and only one strictly freshwater coralline species exists.[6] (Some species of the morphologically similar, but non-calcifying, Hildenbrandia, however, can survive in freshwater.) A wide range of turbidities and nutrient concentrations can be tolerated.[13]

Growth edit

Corallines, especially encrusting forms, are slow growers, and expand by 0.1–80 mm annually.[13] All corallines begin with a crustose stage; some later become frondose.[15]

Avoidance of fouling edit

 
Coralline algae about 20 meter deep at the lower limit of kelp forest[16]

As sessile encrusting organisms, the corallines are prone to overgrowth by other "fouling" algae. The group have many defences to such immuration, most of which depend on waves disturbing their thalli. However, the most relied-upon method involves waiting for herbivores to devour the potential encrusters.[17] This places them in the unusual position of requiring herbivory, rather than benefiting from its avoidance.[18] Many species periodically slough their surface epithallus – and anything attached to it.[17]

Some corallines slough off a surface layer of epithallial cells, which in a few cases may be an antifouling mechanism which serves the same function as enhancing herbivore recruitment. This also affects the community, as many algae recruit on the surface of a sloughing coralline, and are then lost with the surface layer of cells. This can also generate patchiness within the community. The common Indo-Pacific corallines, Neogoniolithon fosliei and Sporolithon ptychoides, slough epithallial cells in continuous sheets which often lie on the surface of the plants.

Not all sloughing serves an antifouling function. Epithallial shedding in most corallines is probably simply a means of getting rid of damaged cells whose metabolic function has become impaired. Morton and his students studied sloughing in the South African intertidal coralline alga, Spongites yendoi, a species which sloughs up to 50% of its thickness twice a year. This deep-layer sloughing, which is energetically costly, does not affect seaweed recruitment when herbivores are removed. The surface of these plants is usually kept clean by herbivores, particularly the pear limpet, Patella cochlear. Sloughing in this case is probably a means of eliminating old reproductive structures and grazer-damaged surface cells, and reducing the likelihood of surface penetration by burrowing organisms.

Evolutionary history edit

The corallines have an excellent fossil record from the Early Cretaceous onwards, consistent with molecular clocks that show the divergence of the modern taxa beginning in this period.[1] The fossil record of nonarticulated forms is better: the unmineralized genuiculae of articulated forms break down quickly, scattering the mineralized portions, which then decay more quickly.[1] This said, non-mineralizing coralline algae are known from the Silurian of Gotland[19] showing that the lineage has a much longer history than molecular clocks would indicate.

The earliest known coralline deposits date from the Ordovician,[2][3] although modern forms radiated in the Cretaceous.[20] True corallines are found in rocks of Jurassic age onwards.[21] Stem group corallines are reported from the Ediacaran Doushantuo formation;[20] later stem-group forms include Arenigiphyllum, Petrophyton, Graticula, and Archaeolithophyllum. The corallines were thought to have evolved from within the Solenoporaceae,[22] a view that has been disputed.[3] Their fossil record matches their molecular history, and is complete and continuous.[1]

The Sporolithaceae tend to be more diverse in periods of high ocean temperatures; the opposite is true for the Corallinaceae.[13] The group's diversity has closely tracked the efficiency of grazing herbivores; for instance, the Eocene appearance of parrotfish marked a spike in coralline diversity, and the extinction of many delicately branched (and thus predation-prone) forms.[17]

Taxonomy edit

The group's internal taxonomy is in a state of flux; molecular studies are proving more reliable than morphological methods in approximating relationships within the group.[23] Recent advances in morphological classification based on skeletal ultrastructure, however, are promising. Crystal morphology within the calcified cell wall of coralline algae was found to have a high correspondence with molecular studies. These skeletal structures thus provide morphologic evidence for molecular relationships within the group.[24]

According to AlgaeBase:

  • family Corallinaceae J.V.Lamouroux 170 species[25]
  • family Hydrolithaceae R.A.Townsend & Huisman 28[25]
  • family incertae sedis 1 (genus Amphithalia)[25][26]
  • family Lithophyllaceae Athanasiadis 201[25]
  • family Lithothamniaceae H.J.Haas 106[25]
  • family Mastophoraceae R.A.Townsend & Huisman 14[25]
  • family Porolithaceae R.A.Townsend & Huisman 28[25]
  • family Spongitaceae Kützing 54[25]

According to the World Register of Marine Species:

According to ITIS:

Ecology edit

Fresh surfaces are generally colonized by thin crusts, which are replaced by thicker or branched forms during succession over the course of one (in the tropics) to ten (in the Arctic) years.[17] However, the transition from crusts to branched form depends on environmental conditions. Crusts may also become detached and form calcareous nodules known as Rhodoliths.[27] Their growth may be also disrupted by local environmental factors.[28] While coralline algae are present in most hard substrate marine communities in photic depths, they are more common in higher latitudes and in the Mediterranean.[29] Their ability to calcify in low light conditions makes them the some of deepest photosynthetic multicellular organisms in the ocean,[30] having been found as deep as 268 meters,[31] and as such a critical base of mesophotic ecological systems.[32][33]

Mineralogy edit

Since coralline algae contain calcium carbonate, they fossilize fairly well. They are particularly significant as stratigraphic markers in petroleum geology. Coralline rock was used as building stone since the ancient Greek culture.[34]

The calcite crystals composing the cell wall are elongated perpendicular to the cell wall. The calcite normally contains magnesium (Mg), with the magnesium content varying as a function of species and water temperature.[35] If the proportion of magnesium is high, the deposited mineral is more soluble in ocean water, particularly in colder waters, making some coralline algae deposits more vulnerable to ocean acidification.[36]

History edit

The first coralline alga recognized as a living organism was probably Corallina in the 1st century AD.[37] In 1837, Rodolfo Amando Philippi recognized coralline algae were not animals, and he proposed the two generic names Lithophyllum and Lithothamnion as Lithothamnium.[37] For many years, they were included in the order Cryptonemiales as the family Corallinaceae until, in 1986, they were raised to the order Corallinales.

Corallines in community ecology edit

 
Branched coralline algae washed ashore on the beach of the county park refuge at Moss Beach, California

Many corallines produce chemicals which promote the settlement of the larvae of certain herbivorous invertebrates, particularly abalone. Larval settlement is adaptive for the corallines because the herbivores remove epiphytes which might otherwise smother the crusts and preempt available light. Settlement is also important for abalone aquaculture; corallines appear to enhance larval metamorphosis and the survival of larvae through the critical settlement period. It also has significance at the community level; the presence of herbivores associated with corallines can generate patchiness in the survival of young stages of dominant seaweeds. This has been seen this in eastern Canada, and it is suspected the same phenomenon occurs on Indo-Pacific coral reefs, yet nothing is known about the herbivore enhancement role of Indo-Pacific corallines, or whether this phenomenon is important in coral reef communities.[citation needed]

Some coralline algae develop into thick crusts which provide microhabitat for many invertebrates. For example, off eastern Canada, Morton found juvenile sea urchins, chitons, and limpets suffer nearly 100% mortality due to fish predation unless they are protected by knobby and undercut coralline algae. This is probably an important factor affecting the distribution and grazing effects of herbivores within marine communities. Nothing is known about the microhabitat role of Indo-Pacific corallines. However, the most common species in the region, Hydrolithon onkodes, often forms an intimate relationship with the chiton Cryptoplax larvaeformis. The chiton lives in burrows it makes in H. onkodes plants, and comes out at night to graze on the surface of the coralline. This combination of grazing and burrowing results in a peculiar growth form (called "castles") in H. onkodes, in which the coralline produces nearly vertical, irregularly curved lamellae. Coralline algae are part of the diet of shingle urchins (Colobocentrotus atratus).

Nongeniculate corallines are of particular significance in the ecology of coral reefs, where they add calcareous material to the structure of the reef, help cement the reef together, and are important sources of primary production. Coralline algae are especially important in reef construction, as they lay down calcium carbonate as calcite. Although they contribute considerable bulk to the calcium carbonate structure of coral reefs, their more important role in most areas of the reef, is in acting as the cement which binds the reef materials into a sturdy structure.[38]

Corallines are particularly important in constructing the algal ridge's reef framework for surf-pounded reefs in both the Atlantic and Indo-Pacific regions. Algal ridges are carbonate frameworks constructed mainly by nongeniculate coralline algae (after Adey, 1978). They require high and persistent wave action to form, so develop best on windward reefs with little or no seasonal change in wind direction. Algal ridges are one of the main reef structures that prevent oceanic waves from striking adjacent coastlines, helping to prevent coastal erosion.[citation needed]

Economic importance edit

Because of their calcified structure, coralline algae have a number of economic uses.

Some harvesting of maërl beds that span several thousand kilometres off the coast of Brazil takes place. These beds contain as-yet undetermined species belonging to the genera Lithothamnion and Lithophyllum.

Soil conditioning edit

The collection of unattached corallines (maërl) for use as soil conditioners dates to the 18th century. This is particularly significant in Britain and France, where more than 300,000 tonnes of Phymatolithon calcareum (Pallas, Adey & McKinnin) and Lithothamnion corallioides are dredged annually.

Medicine and food edit

The earliest use of corallines in medicine involved the preparation of a vermifuge from ground geniculate corallines of the genera Corallina and Jania. This use stopped towards the end of the 18th century. Medical science now uses corallines in the preparation of dental bone implants. The cell fusions provide the matrix for the regeneration of bone tissue.

Maërl is also used as a food additive for cattle and pigs, as well as in the filtration of acidic drinking water.

Aquaria edit

As a colorful component of live rock sold in the marine aquarium trade, and an important part of reef health, coralline algae are desired in home aquariums for their aesthetic qualities, and ostensible benefit to the tank ecosystem.[citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ a b Riding, R.; Cope, J.C.W.; Taylor, P.D. (1998). (PDF). Palaeontology. 41: 1069–1076. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 March 2012.
  3. ^ a b c Brooke, C.; Riding, R. (1998). "Ordovician and Silurian coralline red algae". Lethaia. 31 (3): 185. doi:10.1111/j.1502-3931.1998.tb00506.x.
  4. ^ Silva, P.; Johansen, H. W. (1986). "A reappraisal of the order Corallinales (Rhodophyceae)". European Journal of Phycology. 21 (3): 245–254. doi:10.1080/00071618600650281.
  5. ^ Ballesteros E., 2006 Mediterranean coralligenous assemblages: A synthesis of present knowledge. Oceanography and Marine Biology - an Annual Review 44: 123–130
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  18. ^ Stenec, R.S. (1983). "Escalating herbivory and resulting adaptive trends in calcareous algal crusts". Paleobiology. 9k (1): 44–61. Bibcode:1983Pbio....9...44S. doi:10.1017/S0094837300007375. JSTOR 2400629. S2CID 85645519.
  19. ^ Smith, M.R. and Butterfield, N.J. 2013: A new view on Nematothallus: coralline red algae from the Silurian of Gotland. Palaeontology 56, 345–359. 10.1111/j.1475-4983.2012.01203.x
  20. ^ a b Xiao, S.; Knoll, A. H.; Yuan, X.; Pueschel, C. M. (2004). "Phosphatized multicellular algae in the Neoproterozoic Doushantuo Formation, China, and the early evolution of florideophyte red algae". American Journal of Botany. 91 (2): 214–227. doi:10.3732/ajb.91.2.214. PMID 21653378.
  21. ^ Basson, P. W.; Edgell, H. S. (1971). "Calcareous algae from the Jurassic and Cretaceous of Lebanon". Micropaleontology. 17 (4): 411–433. Bibcode:1971MiPal..17..411B. doi:10.2307/1484871. JSTOR 1484871.
  22. ^ Johnson, J. H. (May 1956). "Ancestry of the Coralline algae". Journal of Paleontology. 30 (3): 563–567. ISSN 0022-3360. JSTOR 1300291.
  23. ^ Bittner, L.; Payri, C. E.; Maneveldt, G. W.; Couloux, A.; Cruaud, C.; De Reviers, B.; Le Gall, L. (2011). "Evolutionary history of the Corallinales (Corallinophycidae, Rhodophyta) inferred from nuclear, plastidial and mitochondrial genomes" (PDF). Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 61 (3): 697–713. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2011.07.019. hdl:10566/904. PMID 21851858.
  24. ^ Auer, Gerald; Piller, Werner E. (14 February 2020). "Nanocrystals as phenotypic expression of genotypes—An example in coralline red algae". Science Advances. 6 (7): eaay2126. Bibcode:2020SciA....6.2126A. doi:10.1126/sciadv.aay2126. PMC 7015681. PMID 32095524.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g h "Taxonomy Browser :: Algaebase". www.algaebase.org.
  26. ^ Athanasiadis, Athanasios (January 2, 2019). "Amphithallia, a genus with four-celled carpogonial branches and connecting filaments in the Corallinales (Rhodophyta)". Marine Biology Research. 15 (1): 13–25. Bibcode:2019MBioR..15...13A. doi:10.1080/17451000.2019.1598559. S2CID 155866871 – via Taylor and Francis+NEJM.
  27. ^ Riosmena-Rodríguez, Rafael; Wendy, Nelson; Julio, Aguirre (2016). Rhodolith/Maërl Beds : a global perspective. Switzerland. ISBN 978-3-319-29313-4.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  28. ^ Dulin, Tuvia; Avnaim-Katav, Simona; Sisma-Ventura, Guy; Bialik, Or M.; Angel, Dror L. (January 2020). "Rhodolith beds along the southeastern Mediterranean inner shelf: Implications for past depositional environments". Journal of Marine Systems. 201: 103241. Bibcode:2020JMS...20103241D. doi:10.1016/j.jmarsys.2019.103241. S2CID 210297206.
  29. ^ Basso, Daniela (March 2012). "Carbonate production by calcareous red algae and global change". Geodiversitas. 34 (1): 13–33. doi:10.5252/g2012n1a2. S2CID 86112464.
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  37. ^ a b Irvine, Linda M.; Chamberlain, Yvonne M. (1994). Corallinales, Hildenbrandiales. London, UK: Her Majesty's Stationery Office. ISBN 978-0-11-310016-3.
  38. ^ Caragnano et al., 2009. 3-D distribution of nongeniculate corallinales: A case study from a reef crest of South Sinai (Red Sea, Egypt). Coral Reefs 28: 881-891

Further reading edit

  • Morton, O.; Chamberlain, Y.M. (1985). "Records of some epiphytic coralline algae in the north-east of Ireland". Ireland Naturalists' Journal. 21: 436–440.
  • Morton, O.; Chamberlain, Y.M. (1989). "Further records of encrusting coralline algae on the north-east coast of Ireland". Irish Naturalists' Journal. 23: 102–106.
  • Suneson, S (1943). "The structure, life-history, and taxonomy of the Swedish Corallinaceae". Acta Universitatis Lundensis. N.F. Avd. 2. 39 (9): 1–66.
  • Woelkerling, W. J. (1993). "Type collections of Corallinales (Rhodophyta) in the Foslie Herbarium (TRH)". Gunneria. 67: 1–289.
  • "ITIS Report for Corallinaceae".

External links edit

  • British Phycological Society
  • Algaebase :: Listing the World's Algae AlgaeBase
  • . New Zealand: University of the Western Cape. 2006-09-24. Archived from the original on 2006-09-24.
  • Adey. "The coralline genus Clathromorphum Foslie emend". Biological, physiological, and ecological factors controlling carbonate production in an Arctic/sub-Arctic climate archive. Federal Depository Library Program. GPO 45844.

coralline, algae, algae, order, corallinales, they, characterized, thallus, that, hard, because, calcareous, deposits, contained, within, cell, walls, colors, these, algae, most, typically, pink, some, other, shade, some, species, purple, yellow, blue, white, . Coralline algae are red algae in the order Corallinales They are characterized by a thallus that is hard because of calcareous deposits contained within the cell walls The colors of these algae are most typically pink or some other shade of red but some species can be purple yellow blue white or gray green Coralline algae play an important role in the ecology of coral reefs Sea urchins parrot fish and limpets and chitons both mollusks feed on coralline algae In the temperate Mediterranean Sea coralline algae are the main builders of a typical algal reef the Coralligene coralligenous 5 Many are typically encrusting and rock like found in marine waters all over the world Only one species lives in freshwater 6 Unattached specimens maerl rhodoliths may form relatively smooth compact balls to warty or fruticose thalli Coralline algaeTemporal range Ordovician recent 1 2 3 PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NSpongites yendoi together with the gardening limpet Scutellastra cochlearScientific classification unranked ArchaeplastidaDivision RhodophytaClass FlorideophyceaeSubclass CorallinophycidaeOrder CorallinalesSilva amp Johansen 1986 4 Families and subfamiliesFamilies Corallinaceae Lithophylloideae Mastophoroideae Metagoniolithoideae Corallinoideae Hapalidiaceae Austrolithoideae Choreonematoideae Melobesioideae Sporolithaceae See also the ancestral SolenoporaceaeA close look at almost any intertidal rocky shore or coral reef will reveal an abundance of pink to pinkish grey patches distributed throughout the rock surfaces These patches of pink paint are actually living crustose coralline red algae The red algae belong to the division Rhodophyta within which the coralline algae form the order Corallinales There are over 1600 described species of nongeniculate coralline algae 7 The corallines are presently grouped into two families on the basis of their reproductive structures 8 Contents 1 Distribution 2 Forms 3 Habitat 4 Growth 5 Avoidance of fouling 6 Evolutionary history 7 Taxonomy 8 Ecology 9 Mineralogy 10 History 11 Corallines in community ecology 12 Economic importance 12 1 Soil conditioning 12 2 Medicine and food 12 3 Aquaria 13 See also 14 References 15 Further reading 16 External linksDistribution editCoralline algae are widespread in all of the world s oceans where they often cover close to 100 of rocky substrata Only one species Pneophyllum cetinaensis is found in freshwater Its ancestor lived in brackish water and was already adapted to osmotic stress and rapid changes in water salinity and temperature 6 9 Many are epiphytic grow on other algae or marine angiosperms or epizoic grow on animals and some are even parasitic on other corallines Forms editCorallines have been divided into two groups although this division does not constitute a taxonomic grouping the geniculate articulated corallines the nongeniculate nonarticulated corallines Geniculate corallines are branching tree like organisms which are attached to the substratum by crustose or calcified root like holdfasts The organisms are made flexible by having noncalcified sections genicula separating longer calcified sections intergenicula Nongeniculate corallines range from a few micrometres to several centimetres thick crusts They are often very slow growing and may occur on rock coral skeletons shells other algae or seagrasses Crusts may be thin and leafy to thick and strongly adherent Some are parasitic or partly endophytic on other corallines Many coralline crusts produce knobby protuberances ranging from a millimetre to several centimetres high Some are free living as rhodoliths rounded free living specimens The morphological complexity of rhodoliths enhances species diversity and can be used as a non taxonomic descriptor for monitoring 10 Thalli can be divided into three layers the hypothallus perithallus and epithallus 11 The epithallus is periodically shed either in sheets or piecemeal 12 nbsp Corallina officinalis nbsp Lithothamnion sp nbsp Mesophyllum sp nbsp Unidentified encrusting species nbsp Unidentified encrusting species nbsp Unidentified encrusting speciesHabitat editCorallines live in varying depths of water ranging from periodically exposed intertidal settings to 270 m water depth around the maximum penetration of light 13 Some species can tolerate brackish 13 or hypersaline 14 waters and only one strictly freshwater coralline species exists 6 Some species of the morphologically similar but non calcifying Hildenbrandia however can survive in freshwater A wide range of turbidities and nutrient concentrations can be tolerated 13 Growth editCorallines especially encrusting forms are slow growers and expand by 0 1 80 mm annually 13 All corallines begin with a crustose stage some later become frondose 15 Avoidance of fouling edit nbsp Coralline algae about 20 meter deep at the lower limit of kelp forest 16 As sessile encrusting organisms the corallines are prone to overgrowth by other fouling algae The group have many defences to such immuration most of which depend on waves disturbing their thalli However the most relied upon method involves waiting for herbivores to devour the potential encrusters 17 This places them in the unusual position of requiring herbivory rather than benefiting from its avoidance 18 Many species periodically slough their surface epithallus and anything attached to it 17 Some corallines slough off a surface layer of epithallial cells which in a few cases may be an antifouling mechanism which serves the same function as enhancing herbivore recruitment This also affects the community as many algae recruit on the surface of a sloughing coralline and are then lost with the surface layer of cells This can also generate patchiness within the community The common Indo Pacific corallines Neogoniolithon fosliei and Sporolithon ptychoides slough epithallial cells in continuous sheets which often lie on the surface of the plants Not all sloughing serves an antifouling function Epithallial shedding in most corallines is probably simply a means of getting rid of damaged cells whose metabolic function has become impaired Morton and his students studied sloughing in the South African intertidal coralline alga Spongites yendoi a species which sloughs up to 50 of its thickness twice a year This deep layer sloughing which is energetically costly does not affect seaweed recruitment when herbivores are removed The surface of these plants is usually kept clean by herbivores particularly the pear limpet Patella cochlear Sloughing in this case is probably a means of eliminating old reproductive structures and grazer damaged surface cells and reducing the likelihood of surface penetration by burrowing organisms Evolutionary history editThe corallines have an excellent fossil record from the Early Cretaceous onwards consistent with molecular clocks that show the divergence of the modern taxa beginning in this period 1 The fossil record of nonarticulated forms is better the unmineralized genuiculae of articulated forms break down quickly scattering the mineralized portions which then decay more quickly 1 This said non mineralizing coralline algae are known from the Silurian of Gotland 19 showing that the lineage has a much longer history than molecular clocks would indicate The earliest known coralline deposits date from the Ordovician 2 3 although modern forms radiated in the Cretaceous 20 True corallines are found in rocks of Jurassic age onwards 21 Stem group corallines are reported from the Ediacaran Doushantuo formation 20 later stem group forms include Arenigiphyllum Petrophyton Graticula and Archaeolithophyllum The corallines were thought to have evolved from within the Solenoporaceae 22 a view that has been disputed 3 Their fossil record matches their molecular history and is complete and continuous 1 The Sporolithaceae tend to be more diverse in periods of high ocean temperatures the opposite is true for the Corallinaceae 13 The group s diversity has closely tracked the efficiency of grazing herbivores for instance the Eocene appearance of parrotfish marked a spike in coralline diversity and the extinction of many delicately branched and thus predation prone forms 17 Taxonomy editThe group s internal taxonomy is in a state of flux molecular studies are proving more reliable than morphological methods in approximating relationships within the group 23 Recent advances in morphological classification based on skeletal ultrastructure however are promising Crystal morphology within the calcified cell wall of coralline algae was found to have a high correspondence with molecular studies These skeletal structures thus provide morphologic evidence for molecular relationships within the group 24 According to AlgaeBase family Corallinaceae J V Lamouroux 170 species 25 family Hydrolithaceae R A Townsend amp Huisman 28 25 family incertae sedis 1 genus Amphithalia 25 26 family Lithophyllaceae Athanasiadis 201 25 family Lithothamniaceae H J Haas 106 25 family Mastophoraceae R A Townsend amp Huisman 14 25 family Porolithaceae R A Townsend amp Huisman 28 25 family Spongitaceae Kutzing 54 25 According to the World Register of Marine Species family Corallinaceae Lamouroux 1812 family Hapalidiaceae J E Gray family Sporolithaceae E Verheij 1993According to ITIS family Corallinaceae J V LamourouxEcology editFresh surfaces are generally colonized by thin crusts which are replaced by thicker or branched forms during succession over the course of one in the tropics to ten in the Arctic years 17 However the transition from crusts to branched form depends on environmental conditions Crusts may also become detached and form calcareous nodules known as Rhodoliths 27 Their growth may be also disrupted by local environmental factors 28 While coralline algae are present in most hard substrate marine communities in photic depths they are more common in higher latitudes and in the Mediterranean 29 Their ability to calcify in low light conditions makes them the some of deepest photosynthetic multicellular organisms in the ocean 30 having been found as deep as 268 meters 31 and as such a critical base of mesophotic ecological systems 32 33 Mineralogy editSince coralline algae contain calcium carbonate they fossilize fairly well They are particularly significant as stratigraphic markers in petroleum geology Coralline rock was used as building stone since the ancient Greek culture 34 The calcite crystals composing the cell wall are elongated perpendicular to the cell wall The calcite normally contains magnesium Mg with the magnesium content varying as a function of species and water temperature 35 If the proportion of magnesium is high the deposited mineral is more soluble in ocean water particularly in colder waters making some coralline algae deposits more vulnerable to ocean acidification 36 History editThe first coralline alga recognized as a living organism was probably Corallina in the 1st century AD 37 In 1837 Rodolfo Amando Philippi recognized coralline algae were not animals and he proposed the two generic names Lithophyllum and Lithothamnion as Lithothamnium 37 For many years they were included in the order Cryptonemiales as the family Corallinaceae until in 1986 they were raised to the order Corallinales Corallines in community ecology edit nbsp Branched coralline algae washed ashore on the beach of the county park refuge at Moss Beach CaliforniaMany corallines produce chemicals which promote the settlement of the larvae of certain herbivorous invertebrates particularly abalone Larval settlement is adaptive for the corallines because the herbivores remove epiphytes which might otherwise smother the crusts and preempt available light Settlement is also important for abalone aquaculture corallines appear to enhance larval metamorphosis and the survival of larvae through the critical settlement period It also has significance at the community level the presence of herbivores associated with corallines can generate patchiness in the survival of young stages of dominant seaweeds This has been seen this in eastern Canada and it is suspected the same phenomenon occurs on Indo Pacific coral reefs yet nothing is known about the herbivore enhancement role of Indo Pacific corallines or whether this phenomenon is important in coral reef communities citation needed Some coralline algae develop into thick crusts which provide microhabitat for many invertebrates For example off eastern Canada Morton found juvenile sea urchins chitons and limpets suffer nearly 100 mortality due to fish predation unless they are protected by knobby and undercut coralline algae This is probably an important factor affecting the distribution and grazing effects of herbivores within marine communities Nothing is known about the microhabitat role of Indo Pacific corallines However the most common species in the region Hydrolithon onkodes often forms an intimate relationship with the chiton Cryptoplax larvaeformis The chiton lives in burrows it makes in H onkodes plants and comes out at night to graze on the surface of the coralline This combination of grazing and burrowing results in a peculiar growth form called castles in H onkodes in which the coralline produces nearly vertical irregularly curved lamellae Coralline algae are part of the diet of shingle urchins Colobocentrotus atratus Nongeniculate corallines are of particular significance in the ecology of coral reefs where they add calcareous material to the structure of the reef help cement the reef together and are important sources of primary production Coralline algae are especially important in reef construction as they lay down calcium carbonate as calcite Although they contribute considerable bulk to the calcium carbonate structure of coral reefs their more important role in most areas of the reef is in acting as the cement which binds the reef materials into a sturdy structure 38 Corallines are particularly important in constructing the algal ridge s reef framework for surf pounded reefs in both the Atlantic and Indo Pacific regions Algal ridges are carbonate frameworks constructed mainly by nongeniculate coralline algae after Adey 1978 They require high and persistent wave action to form so develop best on windward reefs with little or no seasonal change in wind direction Algal ridges are one of the main reef structures that prevent oceanic waves from striking adjacent coastlines helping to prevent coastal erosion citation needed Economic importance editBecause of their calcified structure coralline algae have a number of economic uses Some harvesting of maerl beds that span several thousand kilometres off the coast of Brazil takes place These beds contain as yet undetermined species belonging to the genera Lithothamnion and Lithophyllum Soil conditioning edit The collection of unattached corallines maerl for use as soil conditioners dates to the 18th century This is particularly significant in Britain and France where more than 300 000 tonnes of Phymatolithon calcareum Pallas Adey amp McKinnin and Lithothamnion corallioides are dredged annually Medicine and food edit The earliest use of corallines in medicine involved the preparation of a vermifuge from ground geniculate corallines of the genera Corallina and Jania This use stopped towards the end of the 18th century Medical science now uses corallines in the preparation of dental bone implants The cell fusions provide the matrix for the regeneration of bone tissue Maerl is also used as a food additive for cattle and pigs as well as in the filtration of acidic drinking water Aquaria edit As a colorful component of live rock sold in the marine aquarium trade and an important part of reef health coralline algae are desired in home aquariums for their aesthetic qualities and ostensible benefit to the tank ecosystem citation needed See also editCoralline for other organisms that resemble coral or contribute materially to reef creation Leptofauchea coralligena List of coralline algae species in the British IslesReferences edit a b c d Aguirre J Perfectti F Braga J C 2010 Integrating phylogeny molecular clocks and the fossil record in the evolution of coralline algae Corallinales and Sporolithales Rhodophyta Paleobiology 36 4 519 Bibcode 2010Pbio 36 519A doi 10 1666 09041 1 S2CID 85227395 a b Riding R Cope J C W Taylor P D 1998 A coralline like red alga from the Lower Ordovician of Wales PDF Palaeontology 41 1069 1076 Archived from the original PDF on 9 March 2012 a b c Brooke C Riding R 1998 Ordovician and Silurian coralline red algae Lethaia 31 3 185 doi 10 1111 j 1502 3931 1998 tb00506 x Silva P Johansen H W 1986 A reappraisal of the order Corallinales Rhodophyceae European Journal of Phycology 21 3 245 254 doi 10 1080 00071618600650281 Ballesteros E 2006 Mediterranean coralligenous assemblages A synthesis of present knowledge Oceanography and Marine Biology an Annual Review 44 123 130 a b c Zuljevic A et al 2016 First freshwater coralline alga and the role of local features in a major biome transition Sci Rep Nature 6 19642 Bibcode 2016NatSR 619642Z doi 10 1038 srep19642 PMC 4726424 PMID 26791421 Woelkerling Wm J 1988 The coralline red algae An analysis of the genera and subfamilies of non geniculate Corallinaceae Natural History London UK British Museum ISBN 978 0 19 854249 0 Taylor Thomas N Taylor Edith L Krings Michael 2009 Paleobotany the biology and evolution of fossil plants Academic Press ISBN 978 0 12 373972 8 Zuljevic A Kaleb S Pena V Despalatovic M Cvitkovic I De Clerck O Le Gall L Falace A Vita F Braga Juan C Antolic B 2016 Pneophyllum cetinaensis Nature 6 19642 Bibcode 2016NatSR 619642Z doi 10 1038 srep19642 PMC 4726424 PMID 26791421 srep 19642 Basso D et al 2015 Monitoring deep Mediterranean rhodolith beds PDF Aquatic Conservation Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems 26 3 3 doi 10 1002 aqc 2586 Archived from the original PDF on 2022 11 14 Retrieved 2019 12 15 Blackwell W H Marak J H Powell M J 1982 The identity and reproductive structures of a misplaced Solenopora Rhodophycophyta from the Ordovician of southwestern Ohio and eastern Indiana Journal of Phycology 18 4 477 doi 10 1111 j 0022 3646 1982 00477 x Keats D W Knight M A Pueschel C M 1997 Antifouling effects of epithallial shedding in three crustose coralline algae Rhodophyta Coralinales on a coral reef Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 213 2 281 doi 10 1016 S0022 0981 96 02771 2 a b c d e Aguirre J Riding R Braga J C 2000 Diversity of coralline red algae Origination and extinction patterns from the early Cretaceous to the Pleistocene Paleobiology 26 4 651 667 doi 10 1666 0094 8373 2000 026 lt 0651 DOCRAO gt 2 0 CO 2 ISSN 0094 8373 S2CID 130399147 Thornton Scott E Orrin H Pil 1978 A lagoonal crustose coralline algal micro ridge Bahiret el Bibane Tunisia SEPM Journal of Sedimentary Research 48 doi 10 1306 212F7554 2B24 11D7 8648000102C1865D Cabioch J 1988 Morphogenesis and generic concepts in coralline algae A reappraisal Helgolander Meeresuntersuchungen 42 3 4 493 509 Bibcode 1988HM 42 493C doi 10 1007 BF02365623 Kupper F C and Kamenos N A 2018 The future of marine biodiversity and marine ecosystem functioning in UK coastal and territorial waters including UK Overseas Territories with an emphasis on marine macrophyte communities Botanica Marina 61 6 521 535 doi 10 1515 bot 2018 0076 a b c d Steneck R S 1986 The ecology of coralline algal crusts Convergent patterns and adaptative strategies Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 17 273 303 doi 10 1146 annurev es 17 110186 001421 JSTOR 2096997 Stenec R S 1983 Escalating herbivory and resulting adaptive trends in calcareous algal crusts Paleobiology 9k 1 44 61 Bibcode 1983Pbio 9 44S doi 10 1017 S0094837300007375 JSTOR 2400629 S2CID 85645519 Smith M R and Butterfield N J 2013 A new view on Nematothallus coralline red algae from the Silurian of Gotland Palaeontology 56 345 359 10 1111 j 1475 4983 2012 01203 x a b Xiao S Knoll A H Yuan X Pueschel C M 2004 Phosphatized multicellular algae in the Neoproterozoic Doushantuo Formation China and the early evolution of florideophyte red algae American Journal of Botany 91 2 214 227 doi 10 3732 ajb 91 2 214 PMID 21653378 Basson P W Edgell H S 1971 Calcareous algae from the Jurassic and Cretaceous of Lebanon Micropaleontology 17 4 411 433 Bibcode 1971MiPal 17 411B doi 10 2307 1484871 JSTOR 1484871 Johnson J H May 1956 Ancestry of the Coralline algae Journal of Paleontology 30 3 563 567 ISSN 0022 3360 JSTOR 1300291 Bittner L Payri C E Maneveldt G W Couloux A Cruaud C De Reviers B Le Gall L 2011 Evolutionary history of the Corallinales Corallinophycidae Rhodophyta inferred from nuclear plastidial and mitochondrial genomes PDF Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 61 3 697 713 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2011 07 019 hdl 10566 904 PMID 21851858 Auer Gerald Piller Werner E 14 February 2020 Nanocrystals as phenotypic expression of genotypes An example in coralline red algae Science Advances 6 7 eaay2126 Bibcode 2020SciA 6 2126A doi 10 1126 sciadv aay2126 PMC 7015681 PMID 32095524 a b c d e f g h Taxonomy Browser Algaebase www algaebase org Athanasiadis Athanasios January 2 2019 Amphithallia a genus with four celled carpogonial branches and connecting filaments in the Corallinales Rhodophyta Marine Biology Research 15 1 13 25 Bibcode 2019MBioR 15 13A doi 10 1080 17451000 2019 1598559 S2CID 155866871 via Taylor and Francis NEJM Riosmena Rodriguez Rafael Wendy Nelson Julio Aguirre 2016 Rhodolith Maerl Beds a global perspective Switzerland ISBN 978 3 319 29313 4 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Dulin Tuvia Avnaim Katav Simona Sisma Ventura Guy Bialik Or M Angel Dror L January 2020 Rhodolith beds along the southeastern Mediterranean inner shelf Implications for past depositional environments Journal of Marine Systems 201 103241 Bibcode 2020JMS 20103241D doi 10 1016 j jmarsys 2019 103241 S2CID 210297206 Basso Daniela March 2012 Carbonate production by calcareous red algae and global change Geodiversitas 34 1 13 33 doi 10 5252 g2012n1a2 S2CID 86112464 Littler Mark M Littler Diane S Blair Stephen M Norris James N 4 January 1985 Deepest Known Plant Life Discovered on an Uncharted Seamount Science 227 4682 57 59 Bibcode 1985Sci 227 57L doi 10 1126 science 227 4682 57 PMID 17810025 S2CID 20905891 Deep water plant communities from an uncharted seamount off San Salvador Island Bahamas distribution abundance and primary productivity Bialik Or M Varzi Andrea Giulia Duran Ruth Le Bas Timothy Gauci Adam Savini Alessandra Micallef Aaron 25 February 2022 Mesophotic Depth Biogenic Accumulations Biogenic Mounds Offshore the Maltese Islands Central Mediterranean Sea Frontiers in Marine Science 9 803687 doi 10 3389 fmars 2022 803687 hdl 10281 371221 Btracchi Valentina Savini Alessandra Marchese Fabio Palamara Serena Basso Daniela Corselli Cesare February 2015 Coralligenous habitat in the Mediterranean Sea a geomorphological description from remote Italian Journal of Geosciences 134 1 32 40 doi 10 3301 IJG 2014 16 Coletti et al 2017 Economic Importance of Coralline Carbonates In Riosmena Rodriguez et al eds Rhodolith Maerl Beds A Global Perspective Coastal Research Library Vol 15 pp 87 101 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 29315 8 4 ISBN 978 3 319 29313 4 Baas Becking L G Galliher E W 1931 Wall structure and mineralization in coralline algae Journal of Physical Chemistry 35 2 467 479 doi 10 1021 j150320a006 Basso D Granier B 2012 Carbonate production by calcareous red algae and global change Geodiversitas Calcareous algae and global change from identification to quantification 34 13 33 doi 10 5252 g2012n1a2 S2CID 86112464 a b Irvine Linda M Chamberlain Yvonne M 1994 Corallinales Hildenbrandiales London UK Her Majesty s Stationery Office ISBN 978 0 11 310016 3 Caragnano et al 2009 3 D distribution of nongeniculate corallinales A case study from a reef crest of South Sinai Red Sea Egypt Coral Reefs 28 881 891Further reading editMorton O Chamberlain Y M 1985 Records of some epiphytic coralline algae in the north east of Ireland Ireland Naturalists Journal 21 436 440 Morton O Chamberlain Y M 1989 Further records of encrusting coralline algae on the north east coast of Ireland Irish Naturalists Journal 23 102 106 Suneson S 1943 The structure life history and taxonomy of the Swedish Corallinaceae Acta Universitatis Lundensis N F Avd 2 39 9 1 66 Woelkerling W J 1993 Type collections of Corallinales Rhodophyta in the Foslie Herbarium TRH Gunneria 67 1 289 ITIS Report for Corallinaceae External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Coralline algae nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Corallinales British Phycological Society Seaweed Site Algaebase Listing the World s Algae AlgaeBase Coralline algae New Zealand University of the Western Cape 2006 09 24 Archived from the original on 2006 09 24 Adey The coralline genus Clathromorphum Foslie emend Biological physiological and ecological factors controlling carbonate production in an Arctic sub Arctic climate archive Federal Depository Library Program GPO 45844 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Coralline algae amp oldid 1209139458, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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