Abstract

It has been proposed that an effective approach for predicting whether and how reef-forming corals persist under future climate change is to examine populations thriving in present day extreme environments, such as mangrove lagoons, where water temperatures can exceed those of reef environments by more than 3°C, pH levels are more acidic (pH < 7.9, often below 7.6) and O2 concentrations are regularly considered hypoxic (<2 mg/L). Defining the physiological features of these “extreme” corals, as well as their relationships with the, often symbiotic, organisms within their microbiome, could increase our understanding of how corals will persist into the future. To better understand coral-microbe relationships that potentially underpin coral persistence within extreme mangrove environments, we therefore conducted a 9-month reciprocal transplant experiment, whereby specimens of the coral Pocillopora acuta were transplanted between adjacent mangrove and reef sites on the northern Great Barrier Reef. Bacterial communities associated with P. acuta specimens native to the reef environment were dominated by Endozoicomonas, while Symbiodiniaceae communities were dominated by members of the Cladocopium genus. In contrast, P. acuta colonies native to the mangrove site exhibited highly diverse bacterial communities with no dominating members, and Symbiodiniaceae communities dominated by Durusdinium. All corals survived for 9 months after being transplanted from reef-to-mangrove, mangrove-to-reef environments (as well as control within environment transplants), and during this time there were significant changes in the bacterial communities, but not in the Symbiodiniaceae communities or their photo-physiological functioning. In reef-to-mangrove transplanted corals, there were varied, but sometimes rapid shifts in the associated bacterial communities, including a loss of “core” bacterial members after 9 months where coral bacterial communities began to resemble those of the native mangrove corals. Bacterial communities associated with mangrove-to-reef P. acuta colonies also changed from their original composition, but remained different to the native reef corals. Our data demonstrates that P. acuta associated bacterial communities are strongly influenced by changes in environmental conditions, whereas Symbiodiniaceae associated communities remain highly stable.

Highlights

  • Coral reefs worldwide are rapidly deteriorating as a consequence of increasingly frequent and severe marine heatwaves (e.g., Hughes et al, 2018), chronic ocean warming, acidification and deoxygenation (Altieri et al, 2017; Cornwall et al, 2021)

  • The Symbiodiniaceae assemblage within mangrove corals was dominated by species from the Durusdinium genus (ITS2 type profile D1bt_D6_D1_D4_D1bs and D4_D1_D6_D1bu_D2.2_D1h), while reef corals were dominated by members of the Cladocopium genus (ITS2 type profile C1d_C42.2_C1, C1d_C42.2_C1bl_C1_C3cg_C1b and C1d_C1_C42.2_C3cg_C1b_C3), whereby each genus represented >95% of the ITS2 relative abundance at each site

  • We examined the microbial (Symbiodiniaceae and bacterial) communities associated with P. acuta in mangrove lagoon and adjacent reef, and characterised the effect of the surrounding environment on the structure of the microbiome by transplanting corals between the sites

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Summary

Introduction

Coral reefs worldwide are rapidly deteriorating as a consequence of increasingly frequent and severe marine heatwaves (e.g., Hughes et al, 2018), chronic ocean warming, acidification and deoxygenation (Altieri et al, 2017; Cornwall et al, 2021). One approach has been to study corals already thriving under presentday natural extremes, in reef or reef-adjacent habitats where daily pH, O2 and temperature already reach or exceed levels predicted to occur by the end of the century (reviewed by Camp et al, 2018). Such extreme environments include tidal pools (Palumbi et al, 2014; Klepac and Barshis, 2020) and macrotidal reefs (Schoepf et al, 2015, 2020), where corals exhibit exceptional thermal tolerance. Corals in these extreme environments can provide important insights into the future of conspecific reef populations under continued ocean warming

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