Functional significance of dinitrogen fixation in sustaining coral productivity under oligotrophic conditions

Author:

Cardini Ulisse1ORCID,Bednarz Vanessa N.1,Naumann Malik S.1,van Hoytema Nanne1,Rix Laura1,Foster Rachel A.2,Al-Rshaidat Mamoon M. D.34,Wild Christian15

Affiliation:

1. Coral Reef Ecology Group (CORE), Leibniz Center for Tropical Marine Ecology (ZMT), Fahrenheitstrasse 6, 28359 Bremen, Germany

2. Department of Ecology, Environment and Plant Sciences, Stockholm University, 10691 Stockholm, Sweden

3. Laboratory for Molecular Microbial Ecology (LaMME), Marine Science Station, Aqaba 77110, Jordan

4. Department of Marine Biology, The University of Jordan-Aqaba Branch, Aqaba 77110, Jordan

5. Faculty of Biology and Chemistry (FB 2), University of Bremen, 28359 Bremen, Germany

Abstract

Functional traits define species by their ecological role in the ecosystem. Animals themselves are host–microbe ecosystems (holobionts), and the application of ecophysiological approaches can help to understand their functioning. In hard coral holobionts, communities of dinitrogen (N 2 )-fixing prokaryotes (diazotrophs) may contribute a functional trait by providing bioavailable nitrogen (N) that could sustain coral productivity under oligotrophic conditions. This study quantified N 2 fixation by diazotrophs associated with four genera of hermatypic corals on a northern Red Sea fringing reef exposed to high seasonality. We found N 2 fixation activity to be 5- to 10-fold higher in summer, when inorganic nutrient concentrations were lowest and water temperature and light availability highest. Concurrently, coral gross primary productivity remained stable despite lower Symbiodinium densities and tissue chlorophyll a contents. In contrast, chlorophyll a content per Symbiodinium cell increased from spring to summer, suggesting that algal cells overcame limitation of N, an essential element for chlorophyll synthesis. In fact, N 2 fixation was positively correlated with coral productivity in summer, when its contribution was estimated to meet 11% of the Symbiodinium N requirements. These results provide evidence of an important functional role of diazotrophs in sustaining coral productivity when alternative external N sources are scarce.

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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