Abstract
Three colony fragments of the scleractinian coral Mycetophyllia ferox Wells from Florida were observed in flow-through seawater aquaria under light and dark conditions. The colonies were then anesthetized and fixed for microscopic examination. Small vesicles formed across the epidermis in response to light as gastrodermis containing approximately 1.9 × 106 zooxanthellae cm−2 migrated into them. The vesicles flattened in the dark and the gastrodermis retreated to a clumped position. The epidermis is dominated by mucus cells with more than 6300 per mm2. In contrast, there are very few epidermal cnidae. The polyps lack tentacles entirely, though small tentacles do occur, albeit sporadically, along the colline walls. Colline tentacles are expanded both day and night, and there is considerable intracolonial variability in the number of cnidae within them, ranging from as few as 316 to more than 3200 per mm2 tentacle. There may be several small cnidocyst batteries containing both spirocysts and nematocysts (all microbasic p-mastigophores), but the principal battery is at the tentacle tip where cnidae are much more densely packed. There is considerable variation in the ratio of the two cnidae among tentacles in the same colony. Since the tentacles occur inconsistently and do not appear to expand, their functional role is unclear. Comparisons of epidermal characters are made with other members of the genus Mycetophyllia.
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Goldberg, W.M. Epidermal structure of the scleractinian coral Mycetophyllia ferox: light-induced vesicles, copious mucocytes, and sporadic tentacles. Hydrobiologia 530, 451–458 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10750-004-2656-6
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10750-004-2656-6