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Coral does it the conventional way, over the long term through evolution and species formation.
Two additional fragments were transported and affixed in place at each of the following transplantation sites: Reference, Far-1, Near-1, Far-2, Near-2 (note: corals were not transplanted directly at Fish Pens because live coral does not currently exist in that location).
Yet, the coral does have the nifJ gene that encodes pyruvate:flavodoxin oxidoreductase required for electron transport in nitrogenase reduction [ 216].
Too much coral doesn't look good!
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What the coral do with their versions of these genes is a mystery.
But sometimes the coral didn't biodegrade; it sort of stayed in the body, creating problems for the patient, including re-fracturing or turning into a source for bacteria growth.
In addition, while substitutions to mtDNA in most animals exhibit a strong bias toward transitions, mtDNA from these corals does not.
Not all the jars made it, but the corals did.
Without their plant symbionts, the corals don't get enough food and essentially start to starve.
Even lowly corals do it — but infrequently, forgoing sex for as long as a year.
Hughes said the researchers' findings center on a key reality: Dead corals don't make babies.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com