Literature DB >> 33690896

Response diversity in corals: hidden differences in bleaching mortality among cryptic Pocillopora species.

Scott C Burgess1, Erika C Johnston1, Alex S J Wyatt2, James J Leichter3, Peter J Edmunds4.   

Abstract

Variation among functionally similar species in their response to environmental stress buffers ecosystems from changing states. Functionally similar species may often be cryptic species representing evolutionarily distinct genetic lineages that are morphologically indistinguishable. However, the extent to which cryptic species differ in their response to stress, and could therefore provide a source of response diversity, remains unclear because they are often not identified or are assumed to be ecologically equivalent. Here, we uncover differences in the bleaching response between sympatric cryptic species of the common Indo-Pacific coral, Pocillopora. In April 2019, prolonged ocean heating occurred at Moorea, French Polynesia. 72% of pocilloporid colonies bleached after 22 d of severe heating (>8o C-days) at 10 m depth on the north shore fore reef. Colony mortality ranged from 11% to 42% around the island four months after heating subsided. The majority (86%) of pocilloporids that died from bleaching belonged to a single haplotype, despite twelve haplotypes, representing at least five species, being sampled. Mitochondrial (open reading frame) sequence variation was greater between the haplotypes that experienced mortality versus haplotypes that all survived than it was between nominal species that all survived. Colonies > 30 cm in diameter were identified as the haplotype experiencing the most mortality, and in 1125 colonies that were not genetically identified, bleaching and mortality increased with colony size. Mortality did not increase with colony size within the haplotype suffering the highest mortality, suggesting that size-dependent bleaching and mortality at the genus level was caused instead by differences among cryptic species. The relative abundance of haplotypes shifted between February and August, driven by declines in the same common haplotype for which mortality was estimated directly, at sites where heat accumulation was greatest, and where larger colony sizes occurred. The identification of morphologically indistinguishable species that differ in their response to thermal stress, but share a similar ecological function in terms of maintaining a coral-dominated state, has important consequences for uncovering response diversity that drives resilience, especially in systems with low or declining functional diversity.
© 2021 The Authors. Ecology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Ecological Society of America.

Entities:  

Keywords:  zzm321990Pocilloporazzm321990; Moorea; bleaching 2019; colony size; cryptic species; degree heating days

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33690896     DOI: 10.1002/ecy.3324

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ecology        ISSN: 0012-9658            Impact factor:   5.499


  5 in total

1.  Coral taxonomy and local stressors drive bleaching prevalence across the Hawaiian Archipelago in 2019.

Authors:  Morgan Winston; Thomas Oliver; Courtney Couch; Mary K Donovan; Gregory P Asner; Eric Conklin; Kimberly Fuller; Bryant W Grady; Brittany Huntington; Kazuki Kageyama; Tye L Kindinger; Kelly Kozar; Lindsey Kramer; Tatiana Martinez; Amanda McCutcheon; Sheila McKenna; Ku'ulei Rodgers; Cameron Kaʻilikea Shayler; Bernardo Vargas-Angel; Brian Zgliczynski
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2022-09-01       Impact factor: 3.752

Review 2.  Coral-bleaching responses to climate change across biological scales.

Authors:  Robert van Woesik; Tom Shlesinger; Andréa G Grottoli; Rob J Toonen; Rebecca Vega Thurber; Mark E Warner; Ann Marie Hulver; Leila Chapron; Rowan H McLachlan; Rebecca Albright; Eric Crandall; Thomas M DeCarlo; Mary K Donovan; Jose Eirin-Lopez; Hugo B Harrison; Scott F Heron; Danwei Huang; Adriana Humanes; Thomas Krueger; Joshua S Madin; Derek Manzello; Lisa C McManus; Mikhail Matz; Erinn M Muller; Mauricio Rodriguez-Lanetty; Maria Vega-Rodriguez; Christian R Voolstra; Jesse Zaneveld
Journal:  Glob Chang Biol       Date:  2022-04-27       Impact factor: 13.211

3.  Scaling the effects of ocean acidification on coral growth and coral-coral competition on coral community recovery.

Authors:  Nicolas R Evensen; Yves-Marie Bozec; Peter J Edmunds; Peter J Mumby
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2021-07-13       Impact factor: 2.984

4.  More than What Meets the Eye: Differential Spatiotemporal Distribution of Cryptic Intertidal Bangiales.

Authors:  Fernanda P Cid Alda; Nelson Valdivia; Marie-Laure Guillemin
Journal:  Plants (Basel)       Date:  2022-02-24

5.  Temperature-mediated acquisition of rare heterologous symbionts promotes survival of coral larvae under ocean warming.

Authors:  Shayle B Matsuda; Leela J Chakravarti; Ross Cunning; Ariana S Huffmyer; Craig E Nelson; Ruth D Gates; Madeleine J H van Oppen
Journal:  Glob Chang Biol       Date:  2022-01-05       Impact factor: 13.211

  5 in total

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