May 15, 2009

Picture of the Week — Coral Reefs and Climate Change

Pacific coral, Acropora millepora, under fluorescent light. (Courtesy of Misha Matz, The University of Texas at Austin.)

Pacific coral, Acropora millepora, under fluorescent light. (Courtesy of Misha Matz, The University of Texas at Austin.)

The ocean is getting warmer, higher and more acidic due to climate change. How well will coral reefs respond to such stresses?

To find out, a team of researchers led by the University of Texas at Austin is looking to corals’ genes. Sequencing a genome can take years, but a new method developed by the UT researchers reduced that time frame to one month. They focused on the nearly 11,000 genes that the coral actually uses, instead of the unused genes and DNA bits that make up most of the organism’s genome.

The scientists tested their method on the Pacific coral, Acropora millepora, and hope to see an explosion in research about coral adaption and evolution as a result.

by Joseph Caputo





2 Comments »

  1. I read the article, “romance at Sea” and wanted to view the Coral Colony Spawn it mentioned. How do I do that?
    thank you,
    Patricia Tway, Ph.D.

    Comment by Dr. Patricia Tway — January 22, 2010 @ 10:05 am


  2. I want to view a Coral Colony Spawn. How do I do that?
    Patricia Tway
    ptway@comcast.net

    Comment by Dr. Patricia Tway — January 22, 2010 @ 10:06 am


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