Abstract

Widespread coral bleaching occurred in the central Red Sea in 2010 and 2015. During both events, a cross-shelf and depth gradient of bleaching severity was identified within the Thuwal reef system, central Red Sea, Saudi Arabia. While bleaching and survival of coral taxa were monitored, neither in situ reef temperatures nor coral-associated algal communities (family Symbiodiniaceae) were characterized. Here, we determined coral host-associated Symbiodiniaceae communities and monitored temperatures along the same cross-shelf and depth gradient on six reefs in 2017 to better understand the role of these factors in the observed bleaching patterns and to generate a baseline for further studies. We characterized > 600 coral–algal associations across winter and summer in six genera of scleractinian coral (Pocillopora, Stylophora, Seriatopora, Galaxea, Gardineroseris, and Porites) and one fire coral (Family Milleporidae) using ITS2 next-generation sequencing in conjunction with the SymPortal analytical framework. We show that previous bleaching patterns correlate poorly with the largely coral host-specific structure of the 2017 Symbiodiniaceae community and are in better agreement with absolute and intraday sea water temperature variations monitored on the reefs. We demonstrate a greater distinctiveness of Symbiodiniaceae communities at the more severely bleached inshore reefs compared to those reefs further offshore. However, the potential Symbiodiniaceae community changes at these reefs prior to our sampling prevent us from evaluating this distinctiveness as determinative of the differences in bleaching severities. Based on our analyses, we discuss how fine-scale delineation of algal genotypes, including host-specific putative genotypes of Durusdinium trenchii that represent alluring targets for further taxonomic identification, corroborate a niche-adapted rather than generalist character of many coral–Symbiodiniaceae associations. In conclusion, as studies such as this one continue to build the global catalogue of coral–Symbiodiniaceae associations, we may be afforded a better oversight of how specialized coral–algal associations really are and how restricted their modification may be, both of which are critical considerations in predicting the adaptive potential of corals and the reef ecosystems they build.

Highlights

  • Within reef-building corals, there exists a considerable variation in resistance to stressors (Rowan et al 1997; Palumbi et al 2014)

  • Widespread coral bleaching occurred in the central Red Sea in 2010 and 2015

  • A cross-shelf and depth gradient of bleaching severity was identified within the Thuwal reef system, central Red Sea, Saudi Arabia

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Within reef-building corals, there exists a considerable variation in resistance to stressors (Rowan et al 1997; Palumbi et al 2014). The degree of resistance afforded to any given coral is likely determined by the animal itself in combination with the significant number of other symbiotic. It would appear that resistance of the coral holobiont (the consideration of the animal host and its associates as a single unit) is functionally linked to the genotypes of intracellular dinoflagellate algae (family Symbiodiniaceae) present in the association (Sampayo et al 2008; LaJeunesse et al 2014; D’Angelo et al 2015; Silverstein et al 2015; LaJeunesse et al 2018). Given the importance of this association, considerable attention has been paid to identifying Symbiodiniaceae genotypes and associating these genotypes to particular phenotypes (Thornhill et al 2014; Suggett et al 2015; Smith et al 2017)

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call