College of Public Health, Medicine, and Veterinary Sciences, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, 4811, Australia.
Australian Institute of Marine Science, PMB #3, Townsville, MC, QLD, 4810, Australia.
Sci Rep. 2022 Oct 7;12(1):16831. doi: 10.1038/s41598-022-20138-2.
Understanding the distribution and abundance of heat tolerant corals across seascapes is imperative for predicting responses to climate change and to support novel management actions. Thermal tolerance is variable in corals and intrinsic and extrinsic drivers of tolerance are not well understood. Traditional experimental evaluations of coral heat and bleaching tolerance typically involve ramp-and-hold experiments run across days to weeks within aquarium facilities with limits to colony replication. Field-based acute heat stress assays have emerged as an alternative experimental approach to rapidly quantify heat tolerance in many samples yet the role of key methodological considerations on the stress response measured remains unresolved. Here, we quantify the effects of coral fragment size, sampling time point, and physiological measures on the acute heat stress response in adult corals. The effect of fragment size differed between species (Acropora tenuis and Pocillopora damicornis). Most physiological parameters measured here declined over time (tissue colour, chlorophyll-a and protein content) from the onset of heating, with the exception of maximum photosynthetic efficiency (F/F) which was surprisingly stable over this time scale. Based on our experiments, we identified photosynthetic efficiency, tissue colour change, and host-specific assays such as catalase activity as key physiological measures for rapid quantification of thermal tolerance. We recommend that future applications of acute heat stress assays include larger fragments (> 9 cm) where possible and sample between 10 and 24 h after the end of heat stress. A validated high-throughput experimental approach combined with cost-effective genomic and physiological measurements underpins the development of markers and maps of heat tolerance across seascapes and ocean warming scenarios.
了解耐热珊瑚在海域中的分布和丰度对于预测对气候变化的响应以及支持新的管理措施至关重要。珊瑚的耐热性是可变的,其耐受的内在和外在驱动因素还不太清楚。传统的珊瑚耐热性和白化实验评估通常涉及在水族馆设施中进行数天到数周的升温-保持实验,限制了群体的复制。基于野外的急性热应激测定法已成为一种替代的实验方法,可以快速量化许多样本中的耐热性,但对于所测量的应激反应的关键方法学考虑因素的作用仍未得到解决。在这里,我们量化了珊瑚碎片大小、采样时间点和生理测量对成年珊瑚急性热应激反应的影响。碎片大小的影响因物种而异(薄叶鹿角珊瑚和鞍形鹿角珊瑚)。在这里测量的大多数生理参数(组织颜色、叶绿素-a 和蛋白质含量)从加热开始就随时间下降,除了最大光合作用效率(F/F),这在这段时间内出人意料地稳定。根据我们的实验,我们确定了光合作用效率、组织颜色变化以及宿主特异性测定(如过氧化氢酶活性)作为快速量化耐热性的关键生理测量方法。我们建议,未来应用急性热应激测定法时,尽可能使用较大的碎片(>9 厘米),并在热应激结束后 10 到 24 小时之间进行采样。一种经过验证的高通量实验方法结合具有成本效益的基因组和生理测量,可以为耐热性标记和图谱的开发提供支撑,从而应对海域和海洋变暖情景。