Marine science: Bleaching leaves long-lasting effects on coral physiology
Nature Ecology & Evolution
February 9, 2021
Physiological changes can be detected in corals four years after a bleaching event, even if the corals appear to have visibly recovered, suggests a study in Nature Ecology & Evolution. The findings may have implications for the conservation and management of coral reefs.
Coral bleaching has a considerable impact on the health and function of reef ecosystems. When corals are overheated, algal symbionts are lost, leaving only white coral tissue. Although the symbionts can recolonize and corals can visibly recover from bleaching, the longer-term impacts on coral health are not well understood.
Ford Drury, Robert Quinn and colleagues sampled Montipora capitata corals during a severe bleaching event in Kāneʻohe Bay, Hawaiʻi, in 2015. They recorded which corals had and had not bleached. Four years later they measured the same corals’ metabolome (small molecules produced by the organism during various physiological processes). The authors found that corals that had visibly recovered from bleaching showed lasting increases in saturated fatty acids and immune-response molecules. They validated these results in a laboratory study exposing corals with different bleaching histories to experimental temperature stress.
The authors suggest that screening the metabolomes of corals may present a cost-effective and quick method to identify heat-resilient corals that can be used to regenerate damaged reefs.
doi: 10.1038/s41559-020-01388-7
Research highlights
-
Jun 24
Palaeontology: It sucked to be the prey of ancient cephalopodsScientific Reports
-
Jun 24
Sport science: New wearable sensor to measure neck strain may detect potential concussionScientific Reports
-
Jun 23
Scientific community: Women credited less than men in scientific paper authorshipNature
-
Jun 17
Conservation: Feral cats pushing critically endangered marsupial further towards extinctionScientific Reports
-
Jun 17
Health technology: New cost-effective smartphone test for middle ear functionCommunications Medicine
-
Jun 16
Microbiology: DNA analysis indicates origins of the Black DeathNature