Abstract

The San Francisco Bay outflow creates a tidally influenced low-salinity plume that affects adjacent coastal sites. In the study region, Anthopleura elegantissima (Cnidaria; Anthozoa) hosts a single symbiont, the dinoflagellate Breviolum muscatinei. Salinity, temperature, and aerial stress induce a bleaching response similar to corals where symbionts are expelled, causing further energetic stress. Using field observations of environmental conditions and symbiont abundance at sites on a gradient of exposure to estuarine outflow, along with a fully crossed multifactorial lab experiment, we tested for changes in symbiont abundance in response to various combinations of three stressors. Lab experiments were designed to mimic short term outflow events with low salinity, high temperature, and aerial exposure treatments. The lab aerial exposure treatment was a statistically significant factor in suppressing symbiont repopulation (ANOVA, p = .017). In the field, symbiont density decreased with increasing tidal height at the site closest to freshwater outflow (ANOVA, p = .007), suggesting that aerial exposure may affect symbiont density more than sea surface temperature and salinity. Unanticipated documentation of survival in 9 months of sand burial and subsequent repopulation of symbionts is reported as a six-month extension to past observations, exemplifying strong tolerance to environmental insult in this Cnidarian mutualism. The study of this symbiosis is useful in examining predicted changes in ocean conditions in tidepool communities and considering relative sources of stress.

Highlights

  • Marine organisms living in the rocky intertidal zone are hardy to multiple stressors, but a changing climate is altering life even for many robust species

  • We evaluated the hypotheses that relatively high temperature and low salinity compared to local ocean conditions force the escalated expulsion of symbionts from the tentacles of A. elegantissima, and that aerial exposure forces further expulsion

  • Symbiont density decreased with tidal height (ANOVA, F = 4.5, p = .036) (Fig 4)

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Summary

Introduction

Marine organisms living in the rocky intertidal zone are hardy to multiple stressors, but a changing climate is altering life even for many robust species. The rocky intertidal zone is an accessible marine habitat with a history of studies comparing population dynamics to changing ocean conditions [1,2,3,4]. Recent studies show climate change impacts on communities of intertidal marine invertebrates, especially considering cascading effects from altered temperature regimes in both water and air [5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12]. Stress effects on a sea anemone: Symbiodiniaceae symbiosis

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