The reef building coral Stylophora pistillata uses stored carbohydrates to maintain ATP levels under thermal stress

被引:0
作者
Na’ama-Rose Kochman
Renaud Grover
Cecile Rottier
Christine Ferrier-Pages
Maoz Fine
机构
[1] Bar Ilan University,The Goodman Faculty of Life Sciences
[2] The Interuniversity Institute for Marine Sciences in Eilat,undefined
[3] Centre Scientifique de Monaco,undefined
来源
Coral Reefs | 2021年 / 40卷
关键词
Thermal stress; Red Sea; ATP; Coral bleaching; Climate change;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Coral reefs are on the brink of collapse from global warming and associated coral bleaching. Coral bleaching is the loss of algal symbionts from the coral tissue. The reduction in photosynthates produced by the symbionts makes the survival of the coral dependent on heterotrophy and stored resources, which are catabolized into available energy, i.e., Adenosine Triphosphate (ATP). The present study examined how an increase in water temperature affects energetic reserves and available ATP in the Red Sea coral Stylophora pistillata. Following a 9-d hold at 1, 3, 5 °C above ambient summer temperature (~ 26 °C), ATP levels in the coral tissue remained constant. Similarly, no significant differences in the stored energy (proteins, carbohydrates, and lipids) of the holobiont were measured. However, half of the coral nubbins in the + 7 °C treatment experienced tissue dissociation, while the remaining nubbins bleached with a 34% decline in stored energy and a decline in respiration and photosynthesis rates by 69 and 72%, respectively. The + 7 °C treated coral nubbins had 75% lower carbohydrates compared to nubbins at ambient conditions and the lowest carbohydrates to lipid and protein ratio. This study demonstrates that exceeding the high bleaching threshold of S. pistillata in the Gulf of Aqaba is associated with a catabolic response to maintain ATP levels and highlights the energetic cost of thermal stress. Understanding anabolic and catabolic processes in corals under environmental stress is key to understanding their capacity to survive future thermal stress scenarios.
引用
收藏
页码:1473 / 1485
页数:12
相关论文
共 291 条
[21]  
VanderGheynst JS(2000)Experimental assessment of the feeding effort of three scleractinian coral species during a thermal stress: Effect on the rates of photosynthesis Limnol Oceanogr 45 677-685
[22]  
Coles SL(2009)Bleaching effect on regeneration and resource translocation in the coral J Exp Biol 212 722-730
[23]  
Jokiel PL(1982)A coral reef refuge in the Red Sea Lab Invest 47 412-17
[24]  
Crossland CJ(1993)Recovery of the coral Coral Reefs 12 1-298
[25]  
Davies PS(1984) in the Florida Keys after the 1987 Caribbean “bleaching event” Oecologia 62 289-631
[26]  
Edmunds PJ(2004)Seasonal patterns of tissue biomass and densities of symbiotic dinoflagellates in reef corals and relation to coral bleaching Mar Biol 145 621-1189
[27]  
Davies PS(2006)AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) in the rock crab, Nature 440 1186-3833
[28]  
Edmunds PJ(2014) An early indicator of temperature stress Glob Chang Biol 20 3823-12
[29]  
Davies PS(2017)Biology of disease: free radicals and tissue injury Front Mar Sci 4 1-120
[30]  
Fang L-S(2003)Coral reef bleaching: ecological perspectives FEBS Lett 546 113-42