Abstract

Climate warming is a major cause of the global decline of coral reefs. Active reef restoration, although still in its infancy, is one of several possible ways to help restore coral cover and reef ecosystem function. The deployment of mature coral larvae onto depauperate reef substratum has been shown to significantly increase larval recruitment, providing a novel option for the delivery of ex situ bred coral stock to the reef for restoration purposes. The success of such reef restoration approaches may be improved by the use of coral larval stock augmented for climate resilience. Here we explore whether coral climate resilience can be enhanced via interspecific hybridization through hybrid vigour. Firstly, we assessed cross-fertility of four pairs of Acropora species from the Great Barrier Reef. Temporal isolation in gamete release between the Acropora species was limited, but gametic incompatibility was present with varying strength between species pairs and depending on the direction of the hybrid crosses. We subsequently examined the fitness of hybrid and purebred larvae under heat stress by comparing their survival and settlement success throughout 10 days of exposure to 28 °C, 29.5 °C and 31 °C. Fitness of the majority of Acropora hybrid larvae was similar to that of the purebred larvae of both parental species, and in some instances it was higher than that of the purebred larvae of one of the parental species. Lower hybrid fertilization success did not affect larval fitness. These findings indicate that high hybrid fitness can be achieved after overcoming partial prezygotic barriers, and that interspecific hybridization may be a tool to enhance coral recruitment and climate resilience.

Highlights

  • Elevated seawater temperatures, especially when above an organism’s thermal optimum, have well-documented adverse effects on marine organisms

  • We examined four experimentally crossed pairs of Acropora spp. from the Great Barrier Reef (GBR) using seven parental species, and asked whether hybrid Acropora larvae have enhanced survival and settlement success compared to purebred larvae under ambient and elevated temperatures

  • There were differences in the spawning date and time of the seven Acropora spp. from the central GBR that were used in this study (Fig. 1, Supplementary Table S1)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Especially when above an organism’s thermal optimum, have well-documented adverse effects on marine organisms. As for coral larvae, elevated seawater temperature is known to negatively affect their development, survival and settlement[3,4,5], and larval thermal tolerance can cause a bottleneck to reef recruitment[3,6,7,8]. For example, the natural interspecific hybrid of A. cervicornis and A. palmata in the Caribbean, has been shown to have equivalent or higher fitness in multiple life history stages and phenotypic traits compared to the parental purebred species[41]. Willis et al.[30] reported that hybrid offspring grew faster than purebred offspring in the reef-flat environment These examples suggest that hybrid colonies of Acropora are often more resilient than purebred colonies, and may represent a superior stock for reseeding of damaged reefs

Objectives
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