| Literature DB >> 29396559 |
A Massé1,2, I Domart-Coulon1, S Golubic3, D Duché4, A Tribollet5.
Abstract
Ostreobium sp. (Bryopsidales, Ulvophyceae) is a major microboring alga involved in tropical reef dissolution, with a proposed symbiotic lifestyle in living corals. However, its diversity and colonization dynamics in host's early life stages remained unknown. Here, we mapped microborer distribution and abundance in skeletons of the branching coral Pocillopora damicornis from the onset of calcification in primary polyps (7 days) to budding juvenile colonies (1 and 3 months) growing on carbonate and non-carbonate substrates pre-colonized by natural biofilms, and compared them to adult colonies (in aquarium settings). Primary polyps were surprisingly already colonized by microboring filaments and their level of invasion depended on the nature of settlement substrate and the extent of its pre-colonization by microborers. Growth of early coral recruits was unaffected even when microborers were in close vicinity to the polyp tissue. In addition to morphotype observations, chloroplast-encoded rbcL gene sequence analyses revealed nine new Ostreobium clades (OTU99%) in Pocillopora coral. Recruits and adults shared one dominant rbcL clade, undetected in larvae, but also present in aquarium seawater, carbonate and non-carbonate settlement substrates, and in corals from reef settings. Our results show a substratum-dependent colonization by Ostreobium clades, and indicate horizontal transmission of Ostreobium-coral associations.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29396559 PMCID: PMC5797222 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-20196-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Filamentous microborers observed in coral skeletons. Light (a, c, e) and scanning electron micrographs of the associated microborings or galleries (b, d, f). (a) Phaeophila sp. in dead Porites substrate stained with toluidine blue (black arrow). (b) The corresponding resin- replicated galleries (white arrow). (c) Ostreobium sp. in 1 month old P. damicornis recruit stained with Grocott’s Methenamine Silver (black arrow). (d) The corresponding galleries in dead Porites substrate (white arrow). (e) Fungal hyphae in adult P. damicornis colony stained with toluidine blue (black arrow). (f) The corresponding galleries in dead Porites substrate (white arrow): fungi and Ostreobium galleries* are in close proximity.
Figure 2Substratum-dependent microborer colonization of coral recruits. Euendolithic filaments were detected by photonic and/or scanning electron microscopy in skeletons of P. damicornis (2 to 9 replicates per life stage and substrate type). One month old recruits developed on clean glass had 25% microborer prevalence. Data for 3 months old recruits on dead Porites are missing because full colonization was already reached on these substrates in 1 month old recruits (100% prevalence) and -given the limited availability of larval material- focus was given to the colonization process.
Coral samples and environmental controls used for rbcL detection of dominant Ostreobium clades.
| Sampling site | Sample type (n replicates) | Positive | Cloned | Cloned non-Ostreobidinae Ulvales and Bryopsidales | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ATPD aquarium | Planula larvae (n = 2 x2*) | 0/2 | / | / | / |
| Early metamorphosis (n = 2 x3*) | 0/2 | / | / | / | ||
| 2 days primary polyp (n = 2 x4*) | 0/2 | / | / | / | ||
| 10 days old recruits growing on plastic (n = 3 x3*) | 2/3 | 7/9 | P1, P10, P11 | 2/9 | ||
| 1 month old recruits growing on paper (n = 2) | 2/2 | 4/11 | P1, P6 | 7/11 | ||
| 1 month old recruits growing on plastic (n = 1 x3*) | 1/1 | 0/6 | not detected | 6/6 | ||
| 3 months old recruits growing on plastic (n = 1) | 1/1 | 1/5 | P8 | 4/5 | ||
| 2 months old recruits growing on dead | 1/1 | 6/7 | P1, K | 1/7 | ||
| Living adult branches of | 5/5 | 27/27 | P1, P2, P3 | 0/27 | ||
| Plastic (>6 months) (n = 3) | 1/3 | 2/11 | P1, P8 | 9/11 | ||
| Paper (>6 months) (n = 2) | 1/2 | 4/11 | P10 | 7/11 | ||
| Dead | 1/1 | 9/11 | P1,P2,P5 | 2/11 | ||
| Dead | 1/1 | 5/7 | P1 | 2/7 | ||
| Seawater (1L filtered on 0.2µm membrane) (n = 3) | 1/3 | 6/6 | P1, P5, P9 | 0/6 | ||
|
| Océanopolis aquarium | Living adult branches of | 3/3 | 14/14 | P1, P3 | 0/14 |
| Seawater (3.5L filtered on 0.2µm membrane) (n = 1) | 1/1 | 6/6 | P1 | 0/6 | ||
| Canet aquarium | Living adult branches of | 3/3 | 15/15 | P2, P4 | 0/15 | |
| IUI Reef, Eilat (Israël) | Living adult branches of | 2/10 | 6/8 | P1 | 2/8 | |
| Seawater (3L or 2.5L filtered on 0.2µm membrane) (n = 2) | 0/2 | / | / | / | ||
| New-Caledonian Reef | Living adult branches of | 1/6 | 1/NA | P7 | NA |
(*) early coral life stages were pooled by 2–4 individuals to increase biomass for DNA extraction. NA = non-available data.
Figure 3Colonization dynamics of skeletons of coral recruits and adult colonies by microborers. (a) One month old P. damicornis recruit. (b1) Thin section and (b2) corresponding distribution/abundance mapping of microborers in one month old recruit settled on non-carbonate (plastic) or (c1,c2) carbonate substrate (dead Porites skeleton). (d, e1, f1) Adult P. damicornis colony branch. (e2) Thin section and (e3) corresponding distribution/abundance mapping of microborers in an adult colony; (f2, f3) also illustrated for another adult sample. The higher is the abundance, the warmer is the color code on maps. Dotted line represents the boundary between tissue-covered skeleton (apex) and dead skeletal base. Orientation of thin sections is parallel to coral vertical growth axis (dark blue arrow).
Figure 4Microborer penetration into rapidly extending skeletons of early coral recruits. (a) The colonization capacity is reported as relative depth of penetration of microborers to skeletal height (relative DP) and varies among larval settlement substrates; n = number of measurements of depths of penetration. (b1) Corresponding vertical and (b2) horizontal extension rates of n replicate coral recruits, with standard error. *Significant differences (P < 0.05). Data for 3 months old recruits on dead Porites are missing because monitoring of larval development on these substrates was stopped at 1 month when prevalence of microborers in coral skeleton reached 100% (see Fig. 2).