Frontiers in Marine Science (Jul 2023)

Culturing reef-building corals on a laboratory dish: a simple experimental platform for stony corals

  • Shinya Shikina,
  • Shinya Shikina,
  • Tzu-Chieh Lin,
  • Yu-Ling Chu,
  • Yin-Chu Cheng,
  • Yu-En Chang,
  • Naohisa Wada,
  • Sen-Lin Tang,
  • Yoshiyuki Iizuka,
  • Yi-Ling Chiu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2023.1149495
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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Development and maintenance of coral reef ecosystems rely on daily micro-biological activities of healthy corals. Although a comprehensive understanding of coral biological properties, as well as factors negatively affecting coral growth, are essential to conserve existing corals, the current lack of a tractable culture and experimental platform has delayed acquisition of such knowledge. Here we show a highly versatile culture system, “coral-on-a-laboratory dish” (CLD), allowing long-term culturing of various corals in plastic/glass Petri dishes with maintenance of their biological properties. Under optimized conditions, coral microcolonies (~5 mm x 5 mm fragments) of Pocillopora damicornis were cultured for several months in dishes with high survivorship and characteristic growth. These microcolonies maintained their biological properties, such as reproduction, skeleton formation, coral-algal symbiosis, ingestion, and digestion. Thus far, CLD has been used to maintain at least 4 other coral species from 4 other families, including the Acroporidae, the Pocilloporidae, the Poritidae, and the Merulinidae for more than 2 months with 100% survivorship. CLD is applicable to a variety of biophysiological studies, including coral-algal symbiosis and impact assessment of marine pollutants, e.g., a sunscreen substance, oxybenzone, and an organic biocide, Irgarol 1051, at cellular-level resolution. The CLD platform, which allows easy and inexpensive coral maintenance in a laboratory incubator, represents a technological breakthrough that will greatly advance coral studies.

Keywords