Octocorals of the Indo-Pacific

Yehuda Benayahu*, Tom C.L. Bridge, Patrick L. Colin, Ronen Liberman, Catherine S. McFadden, Oscar Pizarro, Michael H. Schleyer, Erez Shoham, Bastian T. Reijnen, Michal Weis, Junichi Tanaka

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

28 Scopus citations

Abstract

Mesophotic coral ecosystems (MCEs), which comprise the light-dependent communities of corals and other organisms found at depths between 30 and ~150 m, have become a topic that increasingly draws the attention of coral reef researchers. It is well established that after the reef-building scleractinian corals, octocorals are the second most common group of macrobenthic animals on many shallow Indo-Pacific reefs. This chapter reviews the existing knowledge (e.g., species composition and depth of occurrence) on octocorals from selected Indo-Pacific MCEs: Okinawa (Japan), Palau, South Africa, the northern Red Sea, and the Great Barrier Reef (Australia). For all reefs, zooxanthellate taxa are not found below 65 m. We, therefore, suggest that physiological constraints of their symbiotic algae limit the depth distribution of zooxanthellate octocorals. More studies of lower MCEs (60–150 m) and their transition to deepwater communities are needed to answer questions regarding the taxonomy, evolutionary origins, and phylogenetic uniqueness of these mesophotic octocorals. New findings on mesophotic octocoral sexual reproduction indicate a temporal reproductive isolation between shallow and mesophotic octocoral populations, thus challenging the possibility of connectivity between the two populations. The existing data should encourage future studies aimed at a greater understanding of the spatiotemporal features and ecological role of mesophotic octocorals in reef ecosystems.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationCoral Reefs of the World
PublisherSpringer Nature
Pages709-728
Number of pages20
DOIs
StatePublished - 2019

Publication series

NameCoral Reefs of the World
Volume12
ISSN (Print)2213-719X
ISSN (Electronic)2213-7203

Funding

FundersFunder number
National Cancer Institute
Interuniversity Institute for Marine Sciences in Eilat
Israel Cohen Chair in Environmental Zoology
Horizon 2020 Framework Programme634674

    Keywords

    • Depth distribution
    • Diversity
    • Mesophotic coral ecosystems
    • Phylogeny
    • Reproduction

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