Abstract

The success of reef-building corals for >200 million years has been dependent on the mutualistic interaction between the coral host and its photosynthetic endosymbiont dinoflagellates (family Symbiodiniaceae) that supply the coral host with nutrients and energy for growth and calcification. While multiple light scattering in coral tissue and skeleton significantly enhance the light microenvironment for Symbiodiniaceae, the mechanisms of light propagation in tissue and skeleton remain largely unknown due to a lack of technologies to measure the intrinsic optical properties of both compartments in live corals. Here we introduce ISOCT (inverse spectroscopic optical coherence tomography), a non-invasive approach to measure optical properties and three-dimensional morphology of living corals at micron- and nano-length scales, respectively, which are involved in the control of light propagation. ISOCT enables measurements of optical properties in the visible range and thus allows for characterization of the density of light harvesting pigments in coral. We used ISOCT to characterize the optical scattering coefficient (μs) of the coral skeleton and chlorophyll a concentration of live coral tissue. ISOCT further characterized the overall micro- and nano-morphology of live tissue by measuring differences in the sub-micron spatial mass density distribution (D) that vary throughout the tissue and skeleton and give rise to light scattering, and this enabled estimates of the spatial directionality of light scattering, i.e., the anisotropy coefficient, g. Thus, ISOCT enables imaging of coral nanoscale structures and allows for quantifying light scattering and pigment absorption in live corals. ISOCT could thus be developed into an important tool for rapid, non-invasive monitoring of coral health, growth and photophysiology with unprecedented spatial resolution.

Highlights

  • The success of reef-building corals for >200 million years has been dependent on the mutualistic interaction between the coral host and its photosynthetic endosymbiont dinoflagellates that supply the coral host with nutrients and energy for growth and calcification

  • The inverse spectroscopic OCT (ISOCT) signal is scaled by μb, and in order to relate the ISOCT signal to the optical properties of the medium, we model the autocorrelation of the refractive index distribution Bn using the three-parameter Whittle-Matérn model, Bn(r) where r is the spatial separation between any two points, An is proportional to the variance of the refractive index σn, Ln represents a correlation distance, D describes the shape of the correlation function, and Kx() denotes the modified Bessel function of the second kind[27]

  • A short-time Fourier Transform was applied to the raw optical coherence tomography (OCT) data using Gaussian windows (FWHM of 20 nm) to compute a spectral cube consisting of OCT intensity as a function of 3-D position and wavelength

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Summary

Introduction

The success of reef-building corals for >200 million years has been dependent on the mutualistic interaction between the coral host and its photosynthetic endosymbiont dinoflagellates (family Symbiodiniaceae) that supply the coral host with nutrients and energy for growth and calcification. Downwelling light that is not absorbed by the symbionts in the first pass can be scattered back into the tissue by the calcium carbonate skeleton and increase the light availability[12,13,14,15,16,17]. Measuring D from the skeletons of 88 coral species revealed their overall skeletal organization to be a ‘mass-fractal’ structure (i.e., average D < 3), which correlated with their growth rates, light-scattering properties and bleaching susceptibility[31] This emerging picture suggests that corals that grow at faster rates are more likely to have lower skeletal fractal-dimensions, denser skeletons, lower light-scattering properties, and higher bleaching susceptibility[13,15,31,32,33]. On the other hand, are weakly absorbing with light transport dominated by scattering processes[13,14,15,37]

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