The role of zooxanthellae in the thermal tolerance of corals: a ‘nugget of hope’ for coral reefs in an era of climate change
Top Cited Papers
- 8 June 2006
- journal article
- Published by The Royal Society in Proceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 273 (1599) , 2305-2312
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2006.3567
Abstract
The ability of coral reefs to survive the projected increases in temperature due to global warming will depend largely on the ability of corals to adapt or acclimatize to increased temperature extremes over the next few decades. Many coral species are highly sensitive to temperature stress and the number of stress (bleaching) episodes has increased in recent decades. We investigated the acclimatization potential of Acropora millepora , a common and widespread Indo-Pacific hard coral species, through transplantation and experimental manipulation. We show that adult corals, at least in some circumstances, are capable of acquiring increased thermal tolerance and that the increased tolerance is a direct result of a change in the symbiont type dominating their tissues from Symbiodinium type C to D. Our data suggest that the change in symbiont type in our experiment was due to a shuffling of existing types already present in coral tissues, not through exogenous uptake from the environment. The level of increased tolerance gained by the corals changing their dominant symbiont type to D (the most thermally resistant type known) is around 1–1.5 °C. This is the first study to show that thermal acclimatization is causally related to symbiont type and provides new insight into the ecological advantage of corals harbouring mixed algal populations. While this increase is of huge ecological significance for many coral species, in the absence of other mechanisms of thermal acclimatization/adaptation, it may not be sufficient to survive climate change under predicted sea surface temperature scenarios over the next 100 years. However, it may be enough to ‘buy time’ while greenhouse reduction measures are put in place.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Multiple scattering on coral skeletons enhances light absorption by symbiotic algaeLimnology and Oceanography, 2005
- Genetic Diversity of Symbiotic Dinoflagellates in the Genus SymbiodiniumProtist, 2005
- Corals' adaptive response to climate changeNature, 2004
- Identity and diversity of coral endosymbionts (zooxanthellae) from three Palauan reefs with contrasting bleaching, temperature and shading historiesMolecular Ecology, 2004
- Flexibility in Algal Endosymbioses Shapes Growth in Reef CoralsScience, 2004
- The Acquisition of Exogenous Algal Symbionts by an Octocoral After BleachingScience, 2004
- Kinetics of photoacclimation in coralsOecologia, 2003
- Reef corals bleach to survive changeNature, 2001
- 1997–98: Unprecedented thermal stress to coral reefs?Geophysical Research Letters, 2000
- Climate change, coral bleaching and the future of the world's coral reefsMarine and Freshwater Research, 1999