- Location
- Holland/Germany
This is a question for Julian regarding his Goniopora article.
If another forum section is more appropriate for it then please feel free to move it.
Hi Julian,
I hope you are doing well.
I would appreciate if you could respond to the following.
The Goniopora sp. at Waikiki, for example, is in an open system fed plankton-free well water. If food were the only issue, surely specimens maintained in heavily fed aquariums would fare better than those maintained in sparsely fed aquariums. They apparently don't.
Has it been experimentally verified that it is free of plankton both day and night?
Did you consider the presence of other potential food sources such colloidal organic matter, snow, dissolved organics and bacteria?
and partly due to what I believe is the principle problem, oxidative stress damage
If there would be oxidative stress then it seems logical to me that the Goniopora would retract all it’s polyps immediately and fully in such a stress situation.
I personally have seen this with several Goniopora when temperature did rise suddenly to something like 34 C.
The Goniopora cf. tenuidens remained closed for several days, but I noticed that the addition of a supplement I prepared that contains iron and manganese seemed to stimulate polyp expansion in the coral within hours. When I discontinued the addition, after a few days the polyps remained contracted for days. When I added the supplement again they expanded within hours and stayed expanded for a few days. When I added the supplement regularly the polyps remained expanded and developed colorful tentacles
If it would have been oxidative stress and if the Mn and or Fe allowed the Goniopora to synthesize the superoxide dismutase then I don’t understand how it could recover so fast (hours) after being prolonged in a stress situation and not just a mild stress situation but one caused by superoxide or other reactive oxygen species. Wouldn't it?
It is known that some metals such as Mn and Fe readily form complexes with organic substances. Could it be that the complexes are more readily taken up by the Goniopora?
It is also known that some metals cause a feeding response in aquatic organisms and is probably one mechanism by which e.g. mussels sense the algae (copper or zinc adsorbed on the algae surface). Could it be that by addition of Mn and or Fe caused a feeding response in the Goniopora this caused by the (temporarily) free ions or as complexes with organic matter?
If this would be true or would not be unlikely then how could you seperate the oxidative stress effect from the starvation effect?
FWIW after the temperature rise (as mentioned above) one of the Goniopora remained completely closed for many months. When it started to expand it’s polyps again after that period it had become green. Initially it was brown.
There has always been sufficient iron and manganese in that tank.
Julian, many thanks in advance.
If another forum section is more appropriate for it then please feel free to move it.
Hi Julian,
I hope you are doing well.
I would appreciate if you could respond to the following.
The Goniopora sp. at Waikiki, for example, is in an open system fed plankton-free well water. If food were the only issue, surely specimens maintained in heavily fed aquariums would fare better than those maintained in sparsely fed aquariums. They apparently don't.
Has it been experimentally verified that it is free of plankton both day and night?
Did you consider the presence of other potential food sources such colloidal organic matter, snow, dissolved organics and bacteria?
and partly due to what I believe is the principle problem, oxidative stress damage
If there would be oxidative stress then it seems logical to me that the Goniopora would retract all it’s polyps immediately and fully in such a stress situation.
I personally have seen this with several Goniopora when temperature did rise suddenly to something like 34 C.
The Goniopora cf. tenuidens remained closed for several days, but I noticed that the addition of a supplement I prepared that contains iron and manganese seemed to stimulate polyp expansion in the coral within hours. When I discontinued the addition, after a few days the polyps remained contracted for days. When I added the supplement again they expanded within hours and stayed expanded for a few days. When I added the supplement regularly the polyps remained expanded and developed colorful tentacles
If it would have been oxidative stress and if the Mn and or Fe allowed the Goniopora to synthesize the superoxide dismutase then I don’t understand how it could recover so fast (hours) after being prolonged in a stress situation and not just a mild stress situation but one caused by superoxide or other reactive oxygen species. Wouldn't it?
It is known that some metals such as Mn and Fe readily form complexes with organic substances. Could it be that the complexes are more readily taken up by the Goniopora?
It is also known that some metals cause a feeding response in aquatic organisms and is probably one mechanism by which e.g. mussels sense the algae (copper or zinc adsorbed on the algae surface). Could it be that by addition of Mn and or Fe caused a feeding response in the Goniopora this caused by the (temporarily) free ions or as complexes with organic matter?
If this would be true or would not be unlikely then how could you seperate the oxidative stress effect from the starvation effect?
FWIW after the temperature rise (as mentioned above) one of the Goniopora remained completely closed for many months. When it started to expand it’s polyps again after that period it had become green. Initially it was brown.
There has always been sufficient iron and manganese in that tank.
Julian, many thanks in advance.