| Literature DB >> 25329546 |
Camerron M Crowder1, Wei-Lo Liang2, Virginia M Weis1, Tung-Yung Fan3.
Abstract
Reproductive timing in corals is associated with environmental variables including temperature, lunar periodicity, and seasonality. Although it is clear that these variables are interrelated, it remains unknown if one variable in particular acts as the proximate signaler for gamete and or larval release. Furthermore, in an era of global warming, the degree to which increases in ocean temperatures will disrupt normal reproductive patterns in corals remains unknown. Pocillopora damicornis, a brooding coral widely distributed in the Indo-Pacific, has been the subject of multiple reproductive ecology studies that show correlations between temperature, lunar periodicity, and reproductive timing. However, to date, no study has empirically measured changes in reproductive timing associated with increased seawater temperature. In this study, the effect of increased seawater temperature on the timing of planula release was examined during the lunar cycles of March and June 2012. Twelve brooding corals were removed from Hobihu reef in Nanwan Bay, southern Taiwan and placed in 23 and 28°C controlled temperature treatment tanks. For both seasons, the timing of planulation was found to be plastic, with the high temperature treatment resulting in significantly earlier peaks of planula release compared to the low temperature treatment. This suggests that temperature alone can influence the timing of larval release in Pocillopora damicornis in Nanwan Bay. Therefore, it is expected that continued increases in ocean temperature will result in earlier timing of reproductive events in corals, which may lead to either variations in reproductive success or phenotypic acclimatization.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25329546 PMCID: PMC4198079 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0107906
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Average daily tank temperatures for both 23 and 28°C temperature treatments in lunar March and June 2012.
Three lines represent temperature values in the three separate treatment tanks. Measurements were taken every 10 minutes and averaged for each lunar day.
Results of Raleigh’s test for uniform distribution of planula release by P. damicornis colonies during March and June lunar cycles.
| Lunar March | Lunar June | |||
| 23°C | 28°C | 23°C | 28°C | |
|
| 17.5±1.1 | 8.4±0.7 | 12.5±1.0 | 7.74±1.7 |
|
| 23.7±5.4 | 16.1±1.9 | 23.8±8.6 | 26.5±10.4 |
|
| 386–7261 | 2133–4638 | 93–208 | 11–291 |
|
| <0.001 | <0.001 | <0.001 | <0.001 |
|
| 1,454±890 | 3593±1359 | 186.3±55 | 127±93 |
|
| 10.4±1.3 | 11.1±1.8 | 9.7±1.1 | 9.8±1.4 |
Mean lunar day (MLD) ± standard deviation, angular deviation of release ± standard deviation, range of Raleigh’s test statistic (z), p-value for Raleigh’s test (p), mean number of planulae released per tank ± standard deviation, and average colony diameter (cm) ± standard deviation.
Figure 2Percent of P. damicornis planulae released each day during lunar March (A and B) and Lunar June (C and D) 2012 reproductive cycles for colonies incubated at 23 (A and C) and 28°C (B and D).
Points represent means of six colonies ± SE. Moon symbols represent lunar phases (new, 1st quarter, full, and last quarter).
Results from a 1-way ANOVA reporting the mean lunar day and angular deviation of planula release for lunar March and June.
| Lunar March | Lunar June | |||||||||
| Mean Lunar Day | DF | SS | MS | F | P | DF | SS | MS | F | P |
| Temperature | 1 | 125.68 | 125.68 | 175.80 | 1.90 E-04 | 1 | 29.22 | 29.22 | 17.66 | 1.40E-02 |
| Residuals | 4 | 2.86 | 0.71 | 4 | 6.62 | 1.65 | ||||
|
| ||||||||||
| Temperature | 1 | 85.43 | 85.43 | 5.93 | 7.2 E-02 | 1 | 11.00 | 10.96 | 0.107 | 0.76 |
| Residuals | 4 | 57.62 | 14.41 | 4 | 409.20 | 102.29 | ||||
Results from a general linear mixed model with repeated measures using a Poisson distribution with colony size treated as a covariate for the total number of planulae released per lunar day.
| Lunar March | Lunar June | |||||||
| Estimate | SE | Z | P | Estimate | SE | Z | P | |
|
| 2.866 | 2.735 | 1.050 | 0.295 | 5.762 | 3.576 | 1.611 | 0.107 |
|
| −0.062 | 0.001 | −61.030 | 2.00E-16 | −0.082 | 0.004 | −19.050 | 2.00E-16 |
|
| 0.256 | 0.078 | 3.250 | 0.001 | −0.116 | 0.093 | −1.251 | 0.211 |
|
| −0.400 | 0.292 | −1.370 | 0.171 | −0.026 | 0.262 | −0.101 | 0.919 |