Abstract

ABSTRACTThe rate of coral reef degradation from climate change is accelerating and, as a consequence, a number of interventions to increase coral resilience and accelerate recovery are under consideration. Acropora spathulata coral colonies that survived mass bleaching in 2016 and 2017 were sourced from a bleaching-impacted and warmer northern reef on the Great Barrier Reef (GBR). These individuals were reproductively crossed with colonies collected from a recently bleached but historically cooler central GBR reef to produce pure and crossbred offspring groups (warm–warm, warm–cool and cool–warm). We tested whether corals from the warmer reef produced more thermally tolerant hybrid and purebred offspring compared with crosses produced with colonies sourced from the cooler reef and whether different symbiont taxa affect heat tolerance. Juveniles were infected with Symbiodinium tridacnidorum, Cladocopium goreaui and Durusdinium trenchii and survival, bleaching and growth were assessed at 27.5°C and 31°C. The contribution of host genetic background and symbiont identity varied across fitness traits. Offspring with either both or one parent from the northern population exhibited a 13- to 26-fold increase in survival odds relative to all other treatments where survival probability was significantly influenced by familial cross identity at 31°C but not 27.5°C (Kaplan–Meier P=0.001 versus 0.2). If in symbiosis with D. trenchii, a warm sire and cool dam provided the best odds of juvenile survival. Bleaching was predominantly driven by Symbiodiniaceae treatment, where juveniles hosting D. trenchii bleached significantly less than the other treatments at 31°C. The greatest overall fold-benefits in growth and survival at 31°C occurred in having at least one warm dam and in symbiosis with D. trenchii. Juveniles associated with D. trenchii grew the most at 31°C, but at 27.5°C, growth was fastest in juveniles associated with C. goreaui. In conclusion, selective breeding with warmer GBR corals in combination with algal symbiont manipulation can assist in increasing thermal tolerance on cooler but warming reefs. Such interventions have the potential to improve coral fitness in warming oceans.This article has an associated First Person interview with the first author of the paper.

Highlights

  • Coral reefs provide a suite of ecosystem services to people worldwide, including livelihoods, sustenance and storm protection (Moberg and Folke, 1999)

  • Symbiont treatment influenced juvenile survival and growth under thermal stress, with juveniles hosting D. trenchii generally performing better than the other symbionts across all familial crosses. This pattern was strong for bleaching fitness in juveniles of parents sourced from the warm reef

  • Juveniles exposed to different Symbiodiniaceae all exhibited significantly higher probability of survival at 27.5°C compared to at 31°C [mean survival at 31°C at the final timepoint±s.e.: D. trenchii: 45.7±5% versus 30.5±5%; Kaplan–Meier (KM) comparison between 27.5°C and 31°C P=0.029; C. goreaui: 56.7±5% versus 12.9±4%; KM P

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Summary

Introduction

Coral reefs provide a suite of ecosystem services to people worldwide, including livelihoods, sustenance and storm protection (Moberg and Folke, 1999). A range of local and global threats has had substantial negative impacts on the health and survival of corals. Marine heat waves in 2016 and 2017 resulted in extensive bleaching that severely impacted live coral cover across the northern and central sectors (Hughes et al, 2017). Temperatures that induce bleaching in corals, defined as the loss of their obligate dinoflagellate symbionts (family Symbiodiniaceae) and/or the reduction of symbiont pigments, are three times more likely than they were three decades ago (Heron et al, 2016). Mitigation strategies are urgently needed to slow or halt further loss of corals from bleaching to maintain the ecological and social values of coral reefs until global warming is curbed

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