Living Coral Displays, Research Laboratories, and Biobanks as Important Reservoirs of Chemodiversity with Potential for Biodiscovery
Ricardo Calado, Miguel C. Leal, Ruben X. G. Silva, Mara Borba, António Ferro, Mariana Almeida, Diana Madeira, Helena Vieira

TL;DR
Living coral displays, labs, and biobanks can help study coral chemicals for new products without harming natural reefs.
Contribution
Highlights alternative settings for coral bioprospecting to preserve natural reefs and their chemodiversity.
Findings
Coral chemodiversity can be studied in controlled environments like labs and biobanks.
Biobanks preserve coral data and specimens, aiding research without reef sampling issues.
Collaboration is needed to maximize opportunities in coral bioprospecting.
Abstract
Over the last decades, bioprospecting of tropical corals has revealed numerous bioactive compounds with potential for biotechnological applications. However, this search involves sampling in natural reefs, and this is currently hampered by multiple ethical and technological constraints. Living coral displays, research laboratories, and biobanks currently offer an opportunity to continue to unravel coral chemodiversity, acting as “Noah’s Arks” that may continue to support the bioprospecting of molecules of interest. This issue is even more relevant if one considers that tropical coral reefs currently face unprecedent threats and irreversible losses that may impair the biodiscovery of molecules with potential for new products, processes, and services. Living coral displays provide controlled environments for studying corals and producing both known and new metabolites under varied…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
Click any figure to enlarge with its caption.
Figure 1
Figure 2
Figure 3
Figure 4Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsCoral and Marine Ecosystems Studies · Marine and coastal plant biology · Cephalopods and Marine Biology
