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John Pandolfi of the ARC Center of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies and Ann Budd of the University of Iowa, both professors, have released new evidence showing that the evolutionary action on coral reefs is not in their ‘hot spots’ - but out on the fringes, where corals struggle to survive.
Their trailblazing research is calling for a re-think about how to protect corals and other at-risk species under climate change.
“We think we may have to pay just as much attention to protecting the edges of the ranges of coral species, where corals are fewer and less
“There are two main reasons. First, this appears to be where corals are evolving most quickly, giving rise to new species, in response to all the challenges they encounter, and where they appear to hybridize with one another most readily, potentially as a survival tactic.
“And second, it is on the edges of their ranges that the corals are likely to
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Pandolfi and Budd have pioneered a new approach to assessing the conservation significance of a population of species - not simply looking at how many species are present, but also the rate of evolution going on among them.
“Evolution is the key to survival for life on Earth, and we feel it makes good sense to assess an area or ecosystem by its evolutionary potential rather than just the number of species it holds,” he said.
“In terms of species richness, these fringe areas can’t compete with the
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“You’d really hate to lose the populations that are really showing high levels of adaptation and change,” Pandolfi says.
In order to compare the rates of evolution in corals, the team studied existing and fossil corals, going back for several hundreds of thousands of
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“One thing we noticed was that not only specialization but also hybridization — inter-breeding among coral species — was going on at the edges much more than in the heart of their range.”
“Both mechanisms are ways in which the rate of coral evolution speeds
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These findings were published in the June edition of Science.
Source:
Thaiindian News, "Corals evolving to fend off effects of climate change", accessed June 21, 2010
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