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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-1793
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract This paper provides the first evidence for sperm chemotaxis in the Scleractinia. Montipora digitata Dana, 1845 (Scleractinia: Coelenterata) is a hermaphroditic coral which reproduces bi-annually, releasing egg-sperm bundles during the mass spawning at Magnetic Island (19°10′S; 146°52′E) in late spring-early summer, and autumn each year. The buoyant egg-sperm bundles float to the surface where they break apart, releasing eggs and sperm into the ocean. Fertilisation occurs after ∼30 min. Unfertilized eggs were collected, washed free of sperm, and freeze-dried. The eggs were extracted with dichloromethane, fractionated by chromatography on silica gel, and the fractions assayed for their ability to attract M. digitata sperm. The active fraction was further fractionated by high-performance liquid chromatography, resulting in the isolation of three highly unsaturated fatty alcohols: (1) dodeca-2,4-diynol; (2) tetradec-13-ene-2,4-diynol; (3) (14Z)-heptadeca-14,16-diene-2,4-diynol. Of these three compounds, only Compound 1 attracted sperm of M. digitata. Synthetic Compound 1, produced from simple precursors by known reactions, possessed sperm-attracting activity comparable to the naturally derived attractant. Preliminary experiments suggest that the natural mixture of Compounds 1, 2 and 3 in the ratio 1:4:9 is more effective in attracting sperm from M. digitata than sperm from other Montipora species. Sperm attractants may act to reduce the incidence of hybridisation between different species of Montipora.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-1793
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Sinularia flexibilis Quoy and Gaimard, 1833 is a dominant soft coral on many Indo-Pacific coral reefs, and has been found to release toxic compounds (diterpenes), which cause tissue necrosis and death in nearby scleractinian corals. This study investigates how S. flexibilis-derived diterpenes inhibit the development of Acropora tenuis Dana, 1846 and Montipora digitata Dana, 1846 eggs and larvae in vitro. Collection and experimental sites at Magnetic (146°49'E; 19°8'S) and Orpheus (146°28'E; 18°32'S) Islands, Queensland, Australia, were utilized during the spawning seasons of 1989–1992. Freshly spawned coral eggs were placed in solutions of three different terpenes, flexibilide, dihydroflexibilide and sinulariolide, at 5 and 10 ppm, before, during, and after fertilisation. The majority of eggs which were fertilised in the presence of the diterpenes lost their cellular integrity and burst just a few hours after treatment. Terpenes were not toxic to unfertilised eggs, nor to 24 h-old embryos, although sperm ceased swimming activity after 1 h of treatment. The terpenes were not fatal to the sperm because fertilisation still occurred in their presence. The ability of the soft coral-derived diterpenes to inhibit cell division suggests that they may have potential applications in cancer chemotherapy.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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