Author:
Ruggeri Maria,Million Wyatt C,Hamilton Lindsey,Kenkel Carly D
Abstract
AbstractContemporary organisms in extreme environments can give insight into how species will respond to environmental change. The intertidal forms an environmental gradient where stress increases with tidal height. Here, we explore the contribution of fixed genotypic and plastic environmental effects on thermal tolerance of the intertidal anemoneAnthopleura elegantissimaand its algal symbionts using a laboratory-based tank experiment. High intertidal anemones had lower baseline symbiont-to-host cell ratios under control conditions, but their symbionts had higher baseline maximum quantum yield compared to low intertidal anemone symbionts, despite identical symbiont communities. High intertidal anemones maintained greater maximum quantum yield and symbiont-to-host cell ratios under heat stress compared to low intertidal anemones, suggesting that high intertidal holobionts have greater thermal tolerance. However, thermal tolerance of clonal anemones acclimatized to different zones was not explained by tidal height alone, indicating emersion duration is not the sole environmental driver of physiological variation. Fixed genotypic effects also influenced physiological baselines, but did not modulate thermal tolerance, demonstrating thermal tolerance is largely driven by environmental history. These results indicate that this symbiosis is highly plastic and may be able to rapidly acclimatize to climate change, defying the convention that symbiotic organisms are more susceptible to environmental stress.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
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