“…In corals, the few cases of chimerism‐borne costs reveal only morphological absorption of chimeric participants (Barki et al, ; Boschma, ), a phenomenon not recorded in naturally growing chimeras of other invertebrates (such as tunicates) growing in the field, reflecting a distensible strategy of fused genotypes depending on environmental conditions (Chadwick‐Furman & Weissman, ). Costs on the coral chimeric size were also suggested (Amar et al, ), as “chimeric‐load” in social bacteria, the reduction in group productivity caused by antagonistic within‐group heterogeneity (Foster, Fortunato, Strassmann, & Queller, ; Mendes‐Soares, Chen, Fitzpatrick, & Velicer, ). Chimeras in few other taxa of marine invertebrates (such as sponges and tunicates) revealed that costs or benefits for chimerism could not be elucidated.…”