| Literature DB >> 28666005 |
Edward G Smith1, Benjamin C C Hume2, Patrice Delaney1, Jörg Wiedenmann2, John A Burt1.
Abstract
Corals in the Arabian/Persian Gulf (PAG) survive extreme sea temperatures (summer mean: >34°C), and it is unclear whether these corals have genetically adapted or physiologically acclimated to these conditions. In order to elucidate the processes involved in the thermal tolerance of PAG corals, it is essential to understand the connectivity between reefs within and outside of the PAG. To this end, this study set out to investigate the genetic structure of the coral, Platygyra daedalea, and its symbiotic algae in the PAG and neighbouring Gulf of Oman. Using nuclear markers (the ITS region and an intron of the Pax-C gene), this study demonstrates genetic divergence of P. daedalea on reefs within the thermally extreme PAG compared with those in the neighbouring Gulf of Oman. Isolation by distance of P. daedalea was supported by the ITS dataset but not the Pax-C intron. In addition, the symbiont community within the PAG was dominated by C3 symbionts, while the purportedly thermotolerant clade D was extremely rare and was common only at sites outside of the PAG. Analysis of the psbAncr indicates that the C3 variant hosted by P. daedalea in the PAG belongs to the newly described species, Symbiodinium thermophilum. The structuring of the coral and symbiont populations suggests that both partners of the symbiosis may contribute to the high bleaching thresholds of PAG corals. While limited gene flow has likely played a role in local adaptation within the PAG, it also indicates limited potential for natural export of thermal tolerance traits to reefs elsewhere in the Indian Ocean threatened by climate change.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28666005 PMCID: PMC5493405 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0180169
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Genetic structure of Platygyra daedalea in the PAG and Gulf of Oman.
Upper panel: Mean monthly averaged maximum SST, 2004–2014. Lower panel: Host haplotype frequencies. Each colour represents a different haplotype and white sectors indicate private haplotypes. SH = Strait of Hormuz.
Pairwise ɸST comparisons between sites for the ITS region (below diagonal) and PAX-C intron (above diagonal).
| DEL | SAD | RAK | MDM | FUJ | MCT | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DEL | -0.010 | -0.023 | 0.016 | 0.051 | ||
| SAD | 0.051 | 0.021 | -0.014 | 0.035 | ||
| RAK | 0.052 | 0.008 | ||||
| MDM | 0.026 | -0.007 | ||||
| FUJ | ||||||
| MCT | 0.038 | 0.034 | -0.027 |
Bold values indicate significance at p<0.05 level.
Fig 2Characterisation of symbiont communities in the southern PAG and Gulf of Oman.
(A) Bar charts indicate the proportion of colonies hosting each ITS2 type or combination of ITS2 types. Vertical separation within the bars indicates colonies where more than one symbiont type was present. (B) Radial phylogenetic tree depicting the relationships between C3 variants found in P. daedalea from PAG reefs, C3 variants from Porites spp. within the region and other C3 variants found elsewhere. The tree was generated by Bayesian inference analysis of the psbAncr region using the alignment generated in a previous study [18]. The branches containing samples from this study are shown in red with labelled arrows indicating the location of the samples (D: Delma; S: Saadiyat; R: Ras al Khaimah). The accession numbers for samples used to generate the tree are shown in S3 and S4 Tables.