| Author(s): | Hill, R. W., Armstrong, E. J., Inaba, K., Morita, M., Tresguerres, M., Stillman, J. H., Roa, J. N., Kwan, G. T. |
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| Year: | 2018 |
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| Title: | Acid secretion by the boring organ of the burrowing giant clam, Tridacna crocea |
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| Journal: | Biology Letters |
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| Volume: | 14 |
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| Number: | 6 |
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| Pages: | 20180047 |
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| Abstract | The giant clam Tridacna crocea, native to Indo-Pacific coral reefs, is noted for its unique ability to bore fully into coral rock and is a major agent of reef bioerosion. However, T. crocea’s mechanism of boring has remained a
mystery despite decades of research. By exploiting a new, two-dimensional pH-sensing technology and manipulating clams to press their presumptive boring tissue (the pedal mantle) against pH-sensing foils, we show that
this tissue lowers the pH of surfaces it contacts by greater than or equal to 2 pH units below seawater pH day and night. Acid secretion is likely mediated by vacuolar-type Hþ-ATPase, which we demonstrate (by immunofluorescence) is abundant in the pedal mantle outer epithelium. Our discovery of acid secretion solves this decades-old mystery and reveals that, during bioerosion, T. crocea can liberate reef constituents directly to the soluble phase, rather than producing sediment alone as earlier assumed. |
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| Keywords: | Bioerosion, Bivalvia, Neoichnology, Paleontology, Recent, Trace fossils |
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| DOI: | https://doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2018.0047 |
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| SARV-WB: | edit record |
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