Odum School of Ecology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, 30601, USA.
School of Natural Resources and the Environment, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, 32601, USA.
Ecology. 2021 Feb;102(2):e03215. doi: 10.1002/ecy.3215. Epub 2021 Jan 18.
Phenotypic variation can lead to variation in the strength and outcome of species interactions. Variation in phenotypic traits can arise due to plastic responses to environmental stimuli, underlying genetic variation, or both, and may reflect differences in the focal organism or aspects of the extended phenotype (e.g., associated microbes). We used a reciprocal transplant experiment of Porites corals to evaluate the role of plasticity vs. heritable diversity on phenotypic traits and performance of corals that varied in their prior exposure to vermetid gastropods, an organism known to reduce coral growth and survival. We measured a suite of phenotypic traits associated with coral performance, many of which showed a plastic response to vermetid exposure. Vermetids decreased calcification of corals, increased microbial diversity, and shifted microbial composition. Most traits also showed a signature of previous exposure environment that persisted even when exposure was reversed: i.e., under the same conditions, corals naïve to vermetids had slower calcification rates, thicker tissues, higher Symbiodiniaceae densities, and different microbiomes than corals previously exposed to vermetids. We suggest the phenotypic differences are heritable, as reefs with and without vermetids were comprised of two different mitotypes, that revealed high, consistent genetic variation. Vermetids were only found on the fast-growing coral mitotype that was characterized by thin tissue, and that likely had a history of disturbance. As extended phenotypes can have community impacts, we suggest vermetid, in addition to microbes, are part of the extended community phenotype of these corals. Coral genotypes can establish different reef trajectories, with thin-tissue types more prone to disturbance and subsequent colonization by other species, like vermetids, which can further facilitate the degradation of coral reefs. The effects of the extended phenotype of species likely influence heterogeneity across landscapes as well as temporal differences in community composition.
表型变异会导致物种相互作用的强度和结果发生变化。表型特征的变异可能是由于对环境刺激的可塑性反应、潜在的遗传变异或两者共同作用而产生的,并且可能反映出焦点生物或扩展表型(例如,相关微生物)的差异。我们使用多孔鹿角珊瑚的互惠移植实验来评估可塑性与遗传多样性对表型特征和珊瑚表现的作用,这些珊瑚在先前暴露于涡虫螺等生物方面存在差异,已知该生物会降低珊瑚的生长和存活率。我们测量了一系列与珊瑚表现相关的表型特征,其中许多特征对涡虫螺暴露表现出可塑性反应。涡虫螺降低了珊瑚的钙化作用,增加了微生物多样性,并改变了微生物组成。大多数特征也表现出先前暴露环境的特征,即使暴露环境发生逆转,这种特征仍然存在:即在相同条件下,对涡虫螺没有经验的珊瑚钙化率较慢、组织较厚、共生藻类密度较高、微生物组不同,而之前暴露于涡虫螺的珊瑚则相反。我们认为这些表型差异是可遗传的,因为有和没有涡虫螺的珊瑚由两种不同的线粒体类型组成,这揭示了高而一致的遗传变异。只有在快速生长的珊瑚线粒体类型上才能发现涡虫螺,这种类型的珊瑚组织较薄,可能有过干扰的历史。由于扩展表型可能对群落产生影响,我们认为涡虫螺除了微生物之外,也是这些珊瑚扩展群落表型的一部分。珊瑚基因型可以建立不同的珊瑚礁轨迹,薄组织类型更容易受到干扰,随后会被其他物种(如涡虫螺)定植,而涡虫螺可以进一步促进珊瑚礁的退化。物种扩展表型的影响可能会影响景观的异质性以及群落组成在时间上的差异。