4.8 Article

Coral bleaching response is unaltered following acclimatization to reefs with distinct environmental conditions

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2025435118

关键词

climate change; coral bleaching; ocean warming; adaptive management; restoration

资金

  1. Paul G. Allen Family Foundation
  2. University of Pennsylvania
  3. NSF [OCE-1923743, OCE-PRF 1323822]
  4. NSF Graduate Research Fellowships

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Urgent action is needed to prevent coral reef demise due to climate crisis. Propagating climate change-resistant corals to restore degraded reefs is promising, as demonstrated in a study showing no alteration in coral heat stress response after transplantation. Growth was found to be highly plastic, with coral metabolic rates and fitness increasing in reefs with higher flow and salinity, indicating acclimatization within just 3 months. Outplanting bleaching-resistant corals is a promising tool for elevating the resistance of coral populations to ocean warming.
Urgent action is needed to prevent the demise of coral reefs as the climate crisis leads to an increasingly warmer and more acidic ocean. Propagating climate change-resistant corals to restore degraded reefs is one promising strategy; however, empirical evidence is needed to determine whether stress resistance is affected by transplantation beyond a coral's native reef. Here, we assessed the performance of bleaching-resistant individuals of two coral species following reciprocal transplantation between reefs with distinct pH, salinity, dissolved oxygen, sedimentation, and flow dynamics to determine whether heat stress response is altered following coral exposure to novel physicochemical conditions in situ. Critically, transplantation had no influence on coral heat stress responses, indicating that this trait was relatively fixed. In contrast, growth was highly plastic, and native performance was not predictive of performance in the novel environment. Coral metabolic rates and overall fitness were higher at the reef with higher flow, salinity, sedimentation, and diel fluctuations of pH and dissolved oxygen, and did not differ between native and cross-transplanted corals, indicating acclimatization via plasticity within just 3 mo. Conversely, crosstransplants at the second reef had higher fitness than native corals, thus increasing the fitness potential of the recipient population. This experiment was conducted during a nonbleaching year, so the potential benefits to recipient population fitness are likely enhanced during bleaching years. In summary, this study demonstrates that outplanting bleaching-resistant corals is a promising tool for elevating the resistance of coral populations to ocean warming.

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