Why full moon gets corals in the mood

Source: scenta
 

Ancient light-sensitive genes may explain the annual mass spawning of corals shortly after a full moon on Australia’s Great Barrier Reef, according to scientists.

The cryptochrome genes occur in corals, insects, fish and mammals -including humans - and are primitive light-sensing pigment mechanisms which predate the evolution of eyes.
 
The Cry2 gene, stimulated by the faint blue light of the full moon, appears to play a central role in triggering the mass synchronised coral spawning, where corals release sperm and eggs into the water, said the team of Australian and Israeli scientists in a paper published in Science.
 
"This is the key to one of the central mysteries of coral reefs," said Professor Ove Hoegh-Guldberg, who led the University of Queensland laboratory which discovered the genes.
 
"We have always wondered how corals without eyes can detect moonlight and get the precise hour of the right couple of days each year to spawn," Hoegh-Guldberg added.
 
The annual mass spawning of corals occurs across a third of a million square kilometres of the Great Barrier Reef, shortly after a full moon.

Full moon sensing

Exposing corals to different colours and intensities of light and sampling live corals on reefs around the time of the full moon, Israeli researcher Oren Levy found the Cry2 gene at its most active in Acropora corals during full moon nights.
 
The genes developed in primitive life forms in the Precambrian, more than 500 million years ago, as a way of sensing light to synchronise their body clocks and breeding cycles, said the researchers.
 
"They are, in a sense, the functional forerunners of eyes," said Hoegh-Guldberg.
 
Cryptochromes still tune humans to the rhythms of the planet, he said, but had lost their light-sensing function.
 
"They play important roles in regulating the body-clocks of many species, from corals to fruit flies, to zebra fish and mice," said David Miller from Australia's James Cook University.
 

 

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Source: scenta
Date Published: October 19, 2007
 
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