High physiological function for corals with thermally tolerant, host-adapted symbionts

Author:

Turnham Kira E.1ORCID,Aschaffenburg Matthew D.2,Pettay D. Tye3ORCID,Paz-García David A.4ORCID,Reyes-Bonilla Héctor5ORCID,Pinzón Jorge1ORCID,Timmins Ellie1,Smith Robin T.6,McGinley Michael P.2,Warner Mark E.2ORCID,LaJeunesse Todd C.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA

2. School of Marine Science and Policy, University of Delaware, Lewes, DE, USA

3. Department of Natural Sciences, University of South Carolina Beaufort, 801 Carteret Street, Beaufort, SC 29902,USA

4. Centro de Investigaciones Biológicas del Noroeste (CIBNOR), Av. IPN 195, La Paz, Baja California Sur 23096, México

5. Universidad Autónoma de Baja California Sur, Carretera al Sur 5.5, La Paz, C.P 23080, Mexico

6. Center for Marine and Environmental Studies, University of the Virgin Islands, St. Thomas, US Virgin Islands

Abstract

The flexibility to associate with more than one symbiont may considerably expand a host's niche breadth. Coral animals and dinoflagellate micro-algae represent one of the most functionally integrated and widespread mutualisms between two eukaryotic partners. Symbiont identity greatly affects a coral's ability to cope with extremes in temperature and light. Over its broad distribution across the Eastern Pacific, the ecologically dominant branching coral, Pocillopora grandis , depends on mutualisms with the dinoflagellates Durusdinium glynnii and Cladocopium latusorum . Measurements of skeletal growth, calcification rates, total mass increase, calyx dimensions, reproductive output and response to thermal stress were used to assess the functional performance of these partner combinations. The results show both host–symbiont combinations displayed similar phenotypes; however, significant functional differences emerged when exposed to increased temperatures. Negligible physiological differences in colonies hosting the more thermally tolerant D. glynnii refute the prevailing view that these mutualisms have considerable growth tradeoffs. Well beyond the Eastern Pacific, pocilloporid colonies with D. glynnii are found across the Pacific in warm, environmentally variable, near shore lagoonal habitats. While rising ocean temperatures threaten the persistence of contemporary coral reefs, lessons from the Eastern Pacific indicate that co-evolved thermally tolerant host–symbiont combinations are likely to expand ecologically and spread geographically to dominate reef ecosystems in the future.

Funder

Phycological Society of America

National Science Foundation

Alfred P. Sloan Foundation

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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