Abstract

Crustose coralline algae (CCA) play vital roles in producing and stabilizing reef structures and inducing the settlement and metamorphosis of invertebrate larvae in coral reef ecosystems. However, little is known about the bacterial communities associated with healthy and bleached CCA and their interactions with coral larval settlement. We collected samples of healthy, middle semi-bleached, and bleached CCA Porolithon onkodes from Sanya Bay in the South China Sea and investigated their influences on the larval settlement and metamorphosis of the reef-building coral Pocillopora damicornis. The larval settlement/metamorphosis rates all exceeded 70% when exposed to healthy, middle semi-bleached, and bleached algae. Furthermore, the compositions of bacterial community using amplicon pyrosequencing of the V3–V4 region of 16S rRNA were investigated. There were no obvious changes in bacterial community structure among healthy, middle semi-bleached, and bleached algae. Alphaproteobacteria, Bacteroidetes, and Gammaproteobacteria were dominant in all samples, which may contribute to coral larval settlement. However, the relative abundances of several bacterial communities varied among groups. The relative abundances of Mesoflavibacter, Ruegeria, Nautella, and Alteromonas in bleached samples were more than double those in the healthy samples, whereas Fodinicurvata and unclassified Rhodobacteraceae were significantly lower in the bleached samples. Additionally, others at the genus level increased significantly from 8.5% in the healthy samples to 22.93% in the bleached samples, which may be related to algal bleaching. These results revealed that the microbial community structure associated with P. onkodes generally displayed a degree of stability. Furthermore, bleached alga was still able to induce larval settlement and metamorphosis.

Highlights

  • Crustose coralline algae (CCA) are considered as critical structural components of coral reef ecosystems

  • The main goal of the study was to investigate the bacterial communities associated with different health statuses of P. onkodes and their interactions with coral larval settlement

  • In the control group without cues, larvae were observed to actively swim throughout the exposure, and the settlement and metamorphosis rate was zero. These results suggested that bleached P. onkodes still induced larval settlement and metamorphosis

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Summary

Introduction

Crustose coralline algae (CCA) are considered as critical structural components of coral reef ecosystems. They play important roles in contributing to primary productivity, producing and stabilizing reef structures through CaCO3 deposition, and functioning as autogenic ecosystem engineers by the provision of three-dimensional habitat structure There are increasing evidences to suggest that algal–bacterial communities are species-specific and may play vital roles in larval settlement (Sneed et al, 2015; Yang et al, 2021), algal health, response to environmental stress, and defense against diseases (Harder et al, 2012; Singh and Reddy, 2014). For an improved understanding of the future health of coral reefs, it is important to determine the bacterial communities associated with CCA and how they shift in response to a disease or environmental stress

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