Abstract

Increasing ocean temperatures have widespread consequences for coral reefs, one of which is coral bleaching. We analyzed a global network of associations between coral species and Symbiodiniaceae for resistance to temperature stress and robustness to perturbations. Null networks were created by changing either the physiological parameters of the nodes or the structures of the networks. We developed a bleaching model in which each link, association, is given a weight based on temperature thresholds for specific host–symbiont pairs and links are removed as temperature increases. Resistance to temperature stress was determined from the response of the networks to the bleaching model. Ecological robustness, defined by how much perturbation is needed to decrease the number of nodes by 50%, was determined for multiple removal models that considered traits of the hosts, symbionts, and their associations. Network resistance to bleaching and robustness to perturbations differed from the null networks and varied across spatial scales, supporting that thermal tolerances, local association patterns, and environment play an important role in network persistence. Networks were more robust to attacks on associations than to attacks on species. Although the global network was fairly robust to random link removals, when links are removed according to the bleaching model, robustness decreases by about 20%. Specific environmental attacks, in the form of increasing temperatures, destabilize the global network of coral species and Symbiodiniaceae. On a global scale, the network was more robust to removals of links with susceptible Symbiodiniaceae than it was to removals of links with susceptible hosts. Thus, the symbionts convey more stability to the symbiosis than the hosts when the system is under an environmental attack. However, our results also provide evidence that the environment of the networks affects robustness to link perturbations. Our work shows that ecological resistance and robustness can be assessed through network analysis that considers specific biological traits and functional weaknesses. The global network of associations between corals and Symbiodiniaceae and its distribution of thermal tolerances are non‐random, and the evolution of this architecture has led to higher sensitivity to environmental perturbations.

Highlights

  • The resistance of coral reefs to changing environmental conditions is a central theme of coral ecology as reefs continue to decline worldwide

  • Our model of coral bleaching, metric for network resistance to temperature stress, and ecological robustness metric allow us to answer the following questions: (1) How does network structure and the distribution of thermal tolerances affect resistance to temperature stress? (2) How does spatial scale, and local association patterns and environment impact network resistance to temperature stress and robustness to perturbations? (3) Is the network more robust to interaction or species removals? (4) Does environment, hosts, or symbionts convey more robustness to the network? We demonstrate that a network approach allows us to determine patterns of resistance to temperature stress and ecosystem robustness on global, ocean-basin, and subregional scales for coral species and their symbiotic algae

  • Our results indicate that the global network of coral species and Symbiodiniaceae associations is susceptible to perturbations that take into account physiological and environmental data and that this susceptibility is, in part, due to the structure of the associations

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Summary

Introduction

The resistance of coral reefs to changing environmental conditions is a central theme of coral ecology as reefs continue to decline worldwide. The breakdown of the association between the coral host and its endosymbiotic algae, is a considerable force behind the deterioration of coral reefs (Hughes et al 2018). Bleaching responses vary across species, individuals, and stress events (Loya et al 2001, Baker 2003). Environmental factors drive bleaching patterns on a large scale (Nakamura and Van Woesik 2001), but the variation in bleaching response is attributed to the complex associations among coral hosts and their symbiotic. Manuscript received 1 July 2019; revised 13 November 2019; accepted 20 December 2019.

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