| Literature DB >> 24391245 |
Peter J Edmunds1, Hunter S Lenihan2.
Abstract
In this study, juvenile colonies of massive Porites spp. (a combination of P. lutea and P. lobata) from the lagoon of Moorea (W 149°50', S 17°30') were damaged and exposed to contrasting conditions of temperature and flow to evaluate how damage and abiotic conditions interact to affect growth, physiological performance, and recovery. The experiment was conducted in April and May 2008 and consisted of two treatments in which corals were either undamaged (controls) or damaged through gouging of tissue and skeleton in a discrete spot mimicking the effects of corallivorous fishes that utilize an excavating feeding mode. The two groups of corals were incubated for 10 days in microcosms that crossed levels of temperature (26.7 and 29.6°C) and flow (6 and 21 cm s-1), and the response assessed as overall colony growth (change in weight), dark-adapted quantum yield of PSII (Fv/Fm), and healing of the gouged areas. The influence of damage on growth was affected by temperature, but not by flow. When averaged across flow treatments, damage promoted growth by 25% at 26.7°C, but caused a 25% inhibition at 29.6°C. The damage also affected Fv/Fm in a pattern that differed between flow speeds, with a 10% reduction at 6 cm s-1, but a 4% increase at 21 cm s-1. Regardless of damage, Fv/Fm at 21 cm s-1 was 11% lower at 26.7°C than at 29.6°C, but was unaffected by temperature at 6 cm s-1. The lesions declined in area at similar rates (4-5% day-1) under all conditions, although the tissue within them regained a normal appearance most rapidly at 26.7°C and 6 cm s-1. These findings show that the response of poritid corals to sub-lethal damage is dependent partly on abiotic conditions, and they are consistent with the hypothesis that following damage, calcification and photosynthesis can compete for metabolites necessary for repair, with the outcome affected by flow-mediated mass transfer. These results may shed light upon the ways in which poritid corals respond to biting by certain corallivorous fishes.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 24391245 PMCID: PMC3873055 DOI: 10.1007/s00227-009-1372-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Biol ISSN: 0025-3162 Impact factor: 2.573
Fig. 1Interaction plots for juvenile massive Porites spp. displaying a whole-colony growth (i.e., growth of undamaged portion of the colony plus regeneration of skeleton within the lesion) and b maximum dark-adapted quantum yield of PSII (F v/F m) for colonies either undamaged (circles) or damaged (triangles) and exposed for 10 days to orthogonal combinations of temperature [low (26.7°C) or high (29.6°C)] and flow [low (6 cm s−1, filled symbols) or high (21 cm s−1, open symbols)]. Results of planned contrasts of undamaged versus damaged groups within each temperature and flow combination were completed according to Sokal and Rohlf (1995) using the MSerror from the ANOVAs for significance testing; ns = not significant at P > 0.050, * = significant at P ≤ 0.050, ** = P < 0.010), and *** = P < 0.001. Contrasts tested for differences between circle and triangle symbols of the same color located within each temperature treatment in each panel of the figure. Means ± SE displayed (n = 10), with symbols offset for clarity
Results of a three-way model I ANOVA comparing growth rate (mg cm−2 day−1) of juvenile massive Porites spp. among flow regimes, temperatures, and damage treatments (all fixed factors)
| Source | SS |
| MS |
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Damage | 0.020 | 1 | 0.020 | 0.030 | 0.864 |
| Temperature | 0.584 | 1 | 0.584 | 0.885 | 0.350 |
| Flow | 0.059 | 1 | 0.059 | 0.089 | 0.766 |
| Damage × temperature | 2.642 | 1 | 2.642 | 4.006 | 0.049 |
| Damage × flow | 2.420 | 1 | 2.420 | 3.669 | 0.060 |
| Error | 46.172 | 70 | 0.660 |
Statistical interactions of flow × temperature and flow × temperature × damage were not significant (P ≥ 0.472) and were pooled with the error term (and are not displayed in the table) for significance testing (Quinn and Keough 2002)
Results of a three-way model I ANOVA comparing maximum dark-adapted quantum yield of PSII (F v/F m, log transformed) of juvenile massive Porites spp. among flow regimes, temperatures, and damage treatments (all fixed factors)
| Source | SS |
| MS |
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Damage | 0.019 | 1 | 0.019 | 2.069 | 0.155 |
| Temperature | 0.090 | 1 | 0.090 | 10.061 | 0.002 |
| Flow | 0.096 | 1 | 0.096 | 10.750 | 0.002 |
| Damage × temperature | 0.006 | 1 | 0.006 | 0.724 | 0.398 |
| Temperature × flow | 0.048 | 1 | 0.048 | 5.330 | 0.024 |
| Damage × flow | 0.088 | 1 | 0.088 | 9.832 | 0.003 |
| Damage × temperature × flow | 0.034 | 1 | 0.034 | 3.837 | 0.054 |
| Error | 0.628 | 70 | 0.009 |
Fig. 2Percentage change in lesion size (area) on juvenile colonies of massive Porites spp. after 10 days under treatments of high flow and high temperature (HH), high flow and low temperature (HL), low flow and high temperature (LH), and low flow and low temperature (LL); mean ± SE shown (n = 10 for all). Change in lesion area was unaffected by treatment (ANOVA, F = 0.667, df = 3,36, P = 0.587), and size of lesions (mm2, data not shown) was unaffected by temperature, flow, or the interaction between the two (P ≥ 0.255). At the start of the experiment, mean size of all lesions was 68 ± 3 mm2 (±SE, n = 40)
Contingency table showing number of Porites spp. colonies at the end of the experiment with scars scored as either showing signs of some healing or mostly/fully healed under the four treatment combinations; n = 10 corals for each treatment combination in the damaged group
| High flow | Low flow | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| High temperature | Low temperature | High temperature | Low temperature | |
| Some healing | 10 | 6 | 6 | 3 |
| Mostly/fully healed | 0 | 4 | 4 | 6 |
Only one coral showed no healing, as determined from a lesion that revealed fully exposed skeleton. Observations in rows were not independent of observations in columns (χ 2 = 9.5, df = 3, P = 0.024)