Emerging evidence for apical dominance in colonial branching Acropora corals

Coloniality and clonality in marine sessile organisms offer several advantages, such as better space occupation and directional growth. In coral colonies, species-specific functional connections are maintained among polyps, allowing for resource translocation and colony architecture coordination. A...

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Main Authors: Eleonora Re, Carlos M. Duarte
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2025-03-01
Series:Frontiers in Marine Science
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Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2025.1531462/full
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author Eleonora Re
Carlos M. Duarte
author_facet Eleonora Re
Carlos M. Duarte
author_sort Eleonora Re
collection DOAJ
description Coloniality and clonality in marine sessile organisms offer several advantages, such as better space occupation and directional growth. In coral colonies, species-specific functional connections are maintained among polyps, allowing for resource translocation and colony architecture coordination. A potential whole-colony integration mechanism is apical dominance, a phenomenon controlling branching patterns through hormonal signaling in plants and seagrass, yet unconfirmed in scleractinian corals. This study aims at investigating the occurrence of apical dominance in corals, hypothesizing that highly integrated species exhibit this mechanism. We experimentally tested this hypothesis in situ by removing the apical tip in three different species (Stylophora sp., Acropora hemprichii, A. pharaonis), presenting two contrasting levels of integration and monitoring their branching morphogenesis over time. After 74 days, the null hypothesis that apical dominance does not occur could not be rejected for A. hemprichii and Stylophora sp., likely due to experimental limitations. However, A. pharaonis exhibited accelerated apical regrowth and increased lateral branching after tip removal, suggesting that apical dominance-like mechanisms may operate in this species. These findings highlight the importance of addressing potential Type 1 and Type 2 errors in experimental design to improve reliability while addressing the emergence of apical dominance in highly integrated coral colonies. Further long-term experiments are needed to capture morphometric changes in slow-growing species, such as A. hemprichii. These findings suggest novel endogenous mechanisms coordinating complex three-dimensional morphogenesis in clonal organisms and offer valuable application in the growing field of coral farming and restoration.
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spelling doaj-art-bdf7babe1e654b7cb4fbb0dbeeeaafc82025-08-20T03:15:16ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Marine Science2296-77452025-03-011210.3389/fmars.2025.15314621531462Emerging evidence for apical dominance in colonial branching Acropora coralsEleonora ReCarlos M. DuarteColoniality and clonality in marine sessile organisms offer several advantages, such as better space occupation and directional growth. In coral colonies, species-specific functional connections are maintained among polyps, allowing for resource translocation and colony architecture coordination. A potential whole-colony integration mechanism is apical dominance, a phenomenon controlling branching patterns through hormonal signaling in plants and seagrass, yet unconfirmed in scleractinian corals. This study aims at investigating the occurrence of apical dominance in corals, hypothesizing that highly integrated species exhibit this mechanism. We experimentally tested this hypothesis in situ by removing the apical tip in three different species (Stylophora sp., Acropora hemprichii, A. pharaonis), presenting two contrasting levels of integration and monitoring their branching morphogenesis over time. After 74 days, the null hypothesis that apical dominance does not occur could not be rejected for A. hemprichii and Stylophora sp., likely due to experimental limitations. However, A. pharaonis exhibited accelerated apical regrowth and increased lateral branching after tip removal, suggesting that apical dominance-like mechanisms may operate in this species. These findings highlight the importance of addressing potential Type 1 and Type 2 errors in experimental design to improve reliability while addressing the emergence of apical dominance in highly integrated coral colonies. Further long-term experiments are needed to capture morphometric changes in slow-growing species, such as A. hemprichii. These findings suggest novel endogenous mechanisms coordinating complex three-dimensional morphogenesis in clonal organisms and offer valuable application in the growing field of coral farming and restoration.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2025.1531462/fullapical dominanceclonal integrationovercompensationbranching patterncoordinated growthscleractinian coral
spellingShingle Eleonora Re
Carlos M. Duarte
Emerging evidence for apical dominance in colonial branching Acropora corals
Frontiers in Marine Science
apical dominance
clonal integration
overcompensation
branching pattern
coordinated growth
scleractinian coral
title Emerging evidence for apical dominance in colonial branching Acropora corals
title_full Emerging evidence for apical dominance in colonial branching Acropora corals
title_fullStr Emerging evidence for apical dominance in colonial branching Acropora corals
title_full_unstemmed Emerging evidence for apical dominance in colonial branching Acropora corals
title_short Emerging evidence for apical dominance in colonial branching Acropora corals
title_sort emerging evidence for apical dominance in colonial branching acropora corals
topic apical dominance
clonal integration
overcompensation
branching pattern
coordinated growth
scleractinian coral
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2025.1531462/full
work_keys_str_mv AT eleonorare emergingevidenceforapicaldominanceincolonialbranchingacroporacorals
AT carlosmduarte emergingevidenceforapicaldominanceincolonialbranchingacroporacorals