Lirman Diego, Schopmeyer Stephanie, Galvan Victor, Drury Crawford, Baker Andrew C, Baums Iliana B
Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science, University of Miami, Miami, Florida, United States of America.
Punta Cana Ecological Foundation, Punta Cana, Dominican Republic.
PLoS One. 2014 Sep 30;9(9):e107253. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0107253. eCollection 2014.
The drastic decline in the abundance of Caribbean acroporid corals (Acropora cervicornis, A. palmata) has prompted the listing of this genus as threatened as well as the development of a regional propagation and restoration program. Using in situ underwater nurseries, we documented the influence of coral genotype and symbiont identity, colony size, and propagation method on the growth and branching patterns of staghorn corals in Florida and the Dominican Republic.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Individual tracking of> 1700 nursery-grown staghorn fragments and colonies from 37 distinct genotypes (identified using microsatellites) in Florida and the Dominican Republic revealed a significant positive relationship between size and growth, but a decreasing rate of productivity with increasing size. Pruning vigor (enhanced growth after fragmentation) was documented even in colonies that lost 95% of their coral tissue/skeleton, indicating that high productivity can be maintained within nurseries by sequentially fragmenting corals. A significant effect of coral genotype was documented for corals grown in a common-garden setting, with fast-growing genotypes growing up to an order of magnitude faster than slow-growing genotypes. Algal-symbiont identity established using qPCR techniques showed that clade A (likely Symbiodinium A3) was the dominant symbiont type for all coral genotypes, except for one coral genotype in the DR and two in Florida that were dominated by clade C, with A- and C-dominated genotypes having similar growth rates.
CONCLUSION/SIGNIFICANCE: The threatened Caribbean staghorn coral is capable of extremely fast growth, with annual productivity rates exceeding 5 cm of new coral produced for every cm of existing coral. This species benefits from high fragment survivorship coupled by the pruning vigor experienced by the parent colonies after fragmentation. These life-history characteristics make A. cervicornis a successful candidate nursery species and provide optimism for the potential role that active propagation can play in the recovery of this keystone species.
加勒比鹿角珊瑚(鹿角珊瑚、指状鹿角珊瑚)数量的急剧下降促使该属被列为受威胁物种,并推动了一项区域繁殖和恢复计划的开展。通过使用原位水下苗圃,我们记录了珊瑚基因型和共生体身份、群体大小以及繁殖方法对佛罗里达州和多米尼加共和国鹿角珊瑚生长和分支模式的影响。
方法/主要发现:对佛罗里达州和多米尼加共和国1700多个在苗圃中培育的鹿角珊瑚碎片和群体(来自37种不同基因型,通过微卫星鉴定)进行个体追踪,结果显示大小与生长之间存在显著的正相关关系,但随着大小增加生产力下降。即使在失去95%珊瑚组织/骨骼的群体中也记录到了修剪活力(碎片化后生长增强),这表明通过依次分割珊瑚可以在苗圃中维持高生产力。在共同花园环境中生长的珊瑚记录到了珊瑚基因型的显著影响,快速生长的基因型生长速度比缓慢生长的基因型快一个数量级。使用qPCR技术确定的藻类共生体身份表明,A类群(可能是共生藻A3)是所有珊瑚基因型的主要共生体类型,但多米尼加共和国的一种珊瑚基因型和佛罗里达州的两种珊瑚基因型以C类群为主,A类群和C类群主导的基因型生长速度相似。
结论/意义:受威胁的加勒比鹿角珊瑚能够极快速生长,年生产力率超过每厘米现有珊瑚产生5厘米新珊瑚。该物种受益于高碎片存活率以及亲代群体在碎片化后经历的修剪活力。这些生活史特征使鹿角珊瑚成为成功的苗圃候选物种,并为积极繁殖在这一关键物种恢复中可能发挥的作用带来了希望。