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Marine Ecology Progress Series

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MEPS 397:63-70 (2009)  -  DOI: https://doi.org/10.3354/meps08271

Comparative depth distribution of corallimorpharians and scleractinians (Cnidaria: Anthozoa)

Daphne G. Fautin1,*, John M. Guinotte2, James C. Orr3

1Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, and Natural History Museum and Biodiversity Research Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 66045, USA
2Marine Conservation Biology Institute, 2122 112th Ave NE, Suite B-300, Bellevue, Washington 98004, USA
3Marine Environment Laboratories (MEL-IAEA), 4, Quai Antoine 1er, MC-98000 Monaco, Monaco
*Email:

ABSTRACT: We assessed whether CaCO3 concentration of seawater may be relevant to the occurrence of members of Corallimorpharia and Scleractinia, which are very similar except for the possession by scleractinians of a calcareous skeleton. In collections of both the Challenger Deep-sea Expedition 1872–1876 and the US Antarctic (Research) Program, average depth of occurrence was significantly greater for corallimorpharians than for scleractinians. We also compared depth of occurrence relative to the position of the aragonite saturation horizon (ASH) at many localities from which specimens were collected. Nearly 25 and 50% of stations at which scleractinians were collected were below the ASH for the Antarctic and Challenger stations, respectively; 50 and 100% of the Antarctic and Challenger stations at which corallimorpharians were collected were below the ASH, respectively. Statistical analyses of these data to test whether there is a difference in the depth, relative to the ASH, at which scleractinians and corallimorpharians occur indicate a difference for the Challenger but not the Antarctic stations; more data are needed. The scleractinians that tolerate living below the ASH belong to a minority of the genera recorded in the surveys, and do not include species considered important in forming bioherms; those that occur deepest are solitary. Some deep-sea scleractinians may be unaffected by shoaling of the ASH that is predicted across all ocean basins in the near future, some may be confined to water shallower than is now the case, and others may cease producing a skeleton, becoming morphologically indistinguishable from corallimorpharians.


KEY WORDS: Corallimorpharia · Scleractinia · Corals · Sea anemones


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Cite this article as: Fautin DG, Guinotte JM, Orr JC (2009) Comparative depth distribution of corallimorpharians and scleractinians (Cnidaria: Anthozoa). Mar Ecol Prog Ser 397:63-70. https://doi.org/10.3354/meps08271

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