Affiliation:
1. Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, 16 Divinity Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.
Abstract
Hundreds of coral species coexist sympatrically on reefs, reproducing in mass-spawning events where hybridization appears common. In the Caribbean, DNA sequence data from all three sympatric
Acropora
corals show that mass spawning does not erode species barriers. Species
A. cervicornis
and
A. palmata
are distinct at two nuclear loci or share ancestral alleles. Morphotypes historically given the name
Acropora prolifera
are entirely F
1
hybrids of these two species, showing morphologies that depend on which species provides the egg for hybridization. Although selection limits the evolutionary potential of hybrids, F
1
individuals can reproduce asexually and form long-lived, potentially immortal hybrids with unique morphologies.
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
Reference34 articles.
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4. SYSTEMATICS OF THE CORAL GENUS ACROPORA: Implications of New Biological Findings for Species Concepts
5. J. E. N. Veron Corals of the World (Australian Institute of Marine Science Townsville Australia 2000).
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