Heat‐tolerant intertidal rock pool coral Porites lutea can potentially adapt to future warming

Author:

Huang Wen1,Meng Linqing1ORCID,Xiao Zunyong12,Tan Ronghua1,Yang Enguang1,Wang Yonggang1,Huang Xueyong1,Yu Kefu13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Guangxi Laboratory on the Study of Coral Reefs in the South China Sea, Coral Reef Research Center of China, School of Marine Sciences Guangxi University Nanning China

2. School of Resources, Environment and Materials, Guangxi University Nanning China

3. Southern Marine Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory Guangzhou China

Abstract

AbstractThe growing threat of global warming on coral reefs underscores the urgency of identifying heat‐tolerant corals and discovering their adaptation mechanisms to high temperatures. Corals growing in intertidal rock pools that vary markedly in daily temperature may have improved heat tolerance. In this study, heat stress experiments were performed on scleractinian coral Porites lutea from subtidal habitat and intertidal rock pool of Weizhou Island in the northern South China Sea. Thermotolerance differences in corals from the two habitats and their mechanisms were explored through phenotype, physiological indicators, ITS2, 16S rRNA, and RNA sequencing. At the extremely high temperature of 34°C, rock pool P. lutea had a stronger heat tolerance than those in the subtidal habitat. The strong antioxidant capacity of the coral host and its microbial partners was important in the resistance of rock pool corals to high temperatures. The host of rock pool corals at 34°C had stronger immune and apoptotic regulation, downregulated host metabolism and disease‐infection‐related pathways compared to the subtidal habitat. P. lutea, in this habitat, upregulated Cladocopium C15 (Symbiodiniaceae) photosynthetic efficiency and photoprotection, and significantly increased bacterial diversity and coral probiotics, including ABY1, Ruegeria, and Alteromonas. These findings indicate that rock pool corals can tolerate high temperatures through the integrated response of coral holobionts. These corals may be ‘touchstones’ for future warming. Our research provides new insights into the complex mechanisms by which corals resist global warming and the theoretical basis for coral reef ecosystem restoration and selection of stress‐resistant coral populations.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Natural Science Foundation of Guangxi Province

Publisher

Wiley

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