Swain Timothy D, DuBois Emily, Gomes Andrew, Stoyneva Valentina P, Radosevich Andrew J, Henss Jillian, Wagner Michelle E, Derbas Justin, Grooms Hannah W, Velazquez Elizabeth M, Traub Joshua, Kennedy Brian J, Grigorescu Arabela A, Westneat Mark W, Sanborn Kevin, Levine Shoshana, Schick Mark, Parsons George, Biggs Brendan C, Rogers Jeremy D, Backman Vadim, Marcelino Luisa A
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Northwestern University, 2145 Sheridan Road, Evanston, IL, 60208, USA.
Department of Zoology, Field Museum of Natural History, 1400 South Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, IL, 60605, USA.
BMC Ecol. 2016 Mar 21;16:10. doi: 10.1186/s12898-016-0061-4.
At the forefront of ecosystems adversely affected by climate change, coral reefs are sensitive to anomalously high temperatures which disassociate (bleaching) photosynthetic symbionts (Symbiodinium) from coral hosts and cause increasingly frequent and severe mass mortality events. Susceptibility to bleaching and mortality is variable among corals, and is determined by unknown proportions of environmental history and the synergy of Symbiodinium- and coral-specific properties. Symbiodinium live within host tissues overlaying the coral skeleton, which increases light availability through multiple light-scattering, forming one of the most efficient biological collectors of solar radiation. Light-transport in the upper ~200 μm layer of corals skeletons (measured as 'microscopic' reduced-scattering coefficient, μ'(S,m)), has been identified as a determinant of excess light increase during bleaching and is therefore a potential determinant of the differential rate and severity of bleaching response among coral species.
Here we experimentally demonstrate (in ten coral species) that, under thermal stress alone or combined thermal and light stress, low-μ'(S,m) corals bleach at higher rate and severity than high-μ'(S,m) corals and the Symbiodinium associated with low-μ'(S,m) corals experience twice the decrease in photochemical efficiency. We further modelled the light absorbed by Symbiodinium due to skeletal-scattering and show that the estimated skeleton-dependent light absorbed by Symbiodinium (per unit of photosynthetic pigment) and the temporal rate of increase in absorbed light during bleaching are several fold higher in low-μ'(S,m) corals.
While symbionts associated with low-[Formula: see text] corals receive less total light from the skeleton, they experience a higher rate of light increase once bleaching is initiated and absorbing bodies are lost; further precipitating the bleaching response. Because microscopic skeletal light-scattering is a robust predictor of light-dependent bleaching among the corals assessed here, this work establishes μ'(S,m) as one of the key determinants of differential bleaching response.
珊瑚礁处于受气候变化负面影响的生态系统前沿,对异常高温敏感,高温会使光合共生体(虫黄藻)与珊瑚宿主分离(白化),并导致越来越频繁和严重的大规模死亡事件。珊瑚对白化和死亡的易感性各不相同,由未知比例的环境历史以及虫黄藻和珊瑚特定属性的协同作用决定。虫黄藻生活在覆盖珊瑚骨骼的宿主组织内,通过多次光散射增加光的可用性,形成了最有效的太阳能辐射生物收集器之一。珊瑚骨骼上部约200μm层的光传输(以“微观”减少散射系数μ'(S,m)衡量)已被确定为白化期间过量光增加的一个决定因素,因此是珊瑚物种间白化反应差异速率和严重程度的一个潜在决定因素。
在此,我们通过实验证明(在十种珊瑚物种中),在单独热应激或热应激与光应激联合作用下,低μ'(S,m)的珊瑚比高μ'(S,m)的珊瑚白化速率更高、程度更严重,且与低μ'(S,m)珊瑚相关的虫黄藻光化学效率下降幅度是其两倍。我们进一步模拟了由于骨骼散射而被虫黄藻吸收的光,结果表明,低μ'(S,m)珊瑚中,虫黄藻(每单位光合色素)吸收的估计依赖于骨骼的光以及白化期间吸收光的时间增加速率要高几倍。
虽然与低μ'(S,m)珊瑚相关的共生体从骨骼获得的总光较少,但一旦开始白化且吸收体丧失,它们的光增加速率会更高;这进一步加剧了白化反应。由于微观骨骼光散射是此处评估的珊瑚中光依赖性白化的一个可靠预测指标,这项工作将μ'(S,m)确立为白化反应差异的关键决定因素之一。