16 research outputs found
Coral symbiotic algae calcify ex hospite in partnership with bacteria
Dinoflagellates of the genus Symbiodinium are commonly recognized
as invertebrate endosymbionts that are of central importance
for the functioning of coral reef ecosystems. However, the
endosymbiotic phase within Symbiodinium life history is inherently
tied to a more cryptic free-living (ex hospite) phase that remains
largely unexplored. Here we show that free-living Symbiodinium
spp. in culture commonly form calcifying bacterial–algal communities
that produce aragonitic spherulites and encase the dinoflagellates
as endolithic cells. This process is driven by Symbiodinium photosynthesis
but occurs only in partnership with bacteria. Our findings
not only place dinoflagellates on the map of microbial–algal
organomineralization processes but also point toward an endolithic
phase in the Symbiodinium life history, a phenomenon that
may provide new perspectives on the biology and ecology of
Symbiodinium spp. and the evolutionary history of the coral–
dinoflagellate symbiosis