Leggat, WMarendy, EBaillie, BWhitney, SpencerLudwig, MBadger, MurrayYellowlees, David2015-12-132015-12-131445-4408http://hdl.handle.net/1885/90763Dinoflagellates exist in symbiosis with a number of marine invertebrates including giant clams, which are the largest of these symbiotic organisms. The dinoflagellates (Symbiodinium sp.) live intercellularly within tubules in the mantle of the host clam.Keywords: Algae; Carbon; Immunology; Physiology; Tissue; Marine invertebrates; Plants (botany); adaptation; carbon fixation; dinoflagellate; inorganic carbon; symbiosis; zooxanthella; algae; Bivalvia; Cnidaria; Coelenterata; Dinophyceae; Invertebrata; Symbiodinium; Carbonic anhydrase; CCM; Clam; Cnidarian; Dinoflagellate; Rubisco; Symbiodinium; Symbiosis; ZooxanthellaeDinoflagellate symbioses:strategies and adaptation for the acquisition and fixation of inorganic carbon20022015-12-12