Abstract

As anomalous heat waves are causing the widespread decline of coral reefs worldwide, there is an urgent need to identify coral populations tolerant to thermal stress. Heat stress adaptive potential is the degree of tolerance expected from evolutionary processes and, for a given reef, depends on the arrival of propagules from reefs exposed to recurrent thermal stress. For this reason, assessing spatial patterns of thermal adaptation and reef connectivity is of paramount importance to inform conservation strategies. In this work, we applied a seascape genomics framework to characterize the spatial patterns of thermal adaptation and connectivity for coral reefs of New Caledonia (Southern Pacific). In this approach, remote sensing of seascape conditions was combined with genomic data from three coral species. For every reef of the region, we computed a probability of heat stress adaptation, and two indices forecasting inbound and outbound connectivity. We then compared our indicators to field survey data, and observed that decrease of coral cover after heat stress was lower at reefs predicted with high probability of adaptation and inbound connectivity. Last, we discussed how these indicators can be used to inform local conservation strategies and preserve the adaptive potential of New Caledonian reefs.

Highlights

  • As anomalous heat waves are causing the widespread decline of coral reefs worldwide, there is an urgent need to identify coral populations tolerant to thermal stress

  • Our results suggest that negative effects of recent heat stress on coral cover are mitigated at reefs predicted with high probability of heat stress adaptation and inbound connectivity

  • By using a redundancy analysis (RDA), we investigated whether such predictions on reef distances were representative proxies of the genetic population structure of corals of the region

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Summary

Introduction

As anomalous heat waves are causing the widespread decline of coral reefs worldwide, there is an urgent need to identify coral populations tolerant to thermal stress. We applied a seascape genomics framework to characterize the spatial patterns of thermal adaptation and connectivity for coral reefs of New Caledonia (Southern Pacific) In this approach, remote sensing of seascape conditions was combined with genomic data from three coral species. By remote sensing sea current movements, it is possible to draw a connectivity map between every reef within an area of interest This can be done using spatial graphs that resume multi-generational dispersal matching spatial patterns of genetic diversity in a given s­ pecies[22]. We employed genomic data from a seascape genomics study on three coral species of the ­region[23] in order to (1) compute the probability of adaptation to heat stress across the whole region, and (2) verify whether predicted sea current connectivity between reefs matched the genetic structure of coral populations. We discuss the conservation status of reefs around New Caledonia, and assess how Scientific Reports | (2020) 10:19680 |

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