Reef-building corals farm and feed on their photosynthetic symbionts

被引:0
作者
Jörg Wiedenmann
Cecilia D’Angelo
M. Loreto Mardones
Shona Moore
Cassandra E. Benkwitt
Nicholas A. J. Graham
Bastian Hambach
Paul A. Wilson
James Vanstone
Gal Eyal
Or Ben-Zvi
Yossi Loya
Amatzia Genin
机构
[1] University of Southampton,The Coral Reef Laboratory, Ocean and Earth Science
[2] Lancaster University,Lancaster Environment Centre
[3] University of Southampton,Ocean and Earth Science
[4] Bar Ilan University,The Mina & Everard Goodman Faculty of Life Sciences
[5] The University of Queensland,Marine Palaeoecology Laboratory, School of Biological Sciences
[6] University of California,Scripps Institution of Oceanography
[7] San Diego,School of Zoology, The George S. Wise Faculty of Life Sciences
[8] Tel Aviv University,Department of Ecology, Evolution & Behavior
[9] Hebrew University of Jerusalem,undefined
[10] The Interuniversity Institute for Marine Sciences,undefined
来源
Nature | 2023年 / 620卷
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摘要
Coral reefs are highly diverse ecosystems that thrive in nutrient-poor waters, a phenomenon frequently referred to as the Darwin paradox1. The energy demand of coral animal hosts can often be fully met by the excess production of carbon-rich photosynthates by their algal symbionts2,3. However, the understanding of mechanisms that enable corals to acquire the vital nutrients nitrogen and phosphorus from their symbionts is incomplete4–9. Here we show, through a series of long-term experiments, that the uptake of dissolved inorganic nitrogen and phosphorus by the symbionts alone is sufficient to sustain rapid coral growth. Next, considering the nitrogen and phosphorus budgets of host and symbionts, we identify that these nutrients are gathered through symbiont ‘farming’ and are translocated to the host by digestion of excess symbiont cells. Finally, we use a large-scale natural experiment in which seabirds fertilize some reefs but not others, to show that the efficient utilization of dissolved inorganic nutrients by symbiotic corals established in our laboratory experiments has the potential to enhance coral growth in the wild at the ecosystem level. Feeding on symbionts enables coral animals to tap into an important nutrient pool and helps to explain the evolutionary and ecological success of symbiotic corals in nutrient-limited waters.
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页码:1018 / 1024
页数:6
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