New research reveals that Caribbean corals and the
algae1(海藻) that inhabit them form a
remarkably2 stable relationship -- new knowledge that can serve as an important tool in preserving and restoring vital reef-building corals. A scientific paper describing these new findings by a team of
marine3 biologists at Penn State was published as a cover article in
Molecular4 Ecology on June 10. Coral reefs are important for protecting shorelines, providing
seafood5, and generating millions of dollars in recreation revenue each year, but rising water temperatures due to climate change are stressing many corals to the point of
extinction7. The Penn State researchers -- Iliana Baums and Todd LaJeunesse, both associate professors of biology, and research technologist Meghann Durante -- conducted a large-scale
genetic8 study of Caribbean elkhorn coral, Acropora palmata. Once the primary reef-building coral species throughout the Caribbean, A. palmata now is listed as endangered under the U.S. Endangered Species Act. The biologists worked on the sub-species level using high-resolution genetic markers that allowed them to examine individual coral colonies and their
symbiotic9 partnerships11 with single-celled algae.
"These big, orange, branching corals are very important for the ecosystem," Baums explained. "They act like trees, building the three-dimensional structure of the reef, and their survival depends on a symbiotic
partnership10 with single-celled algae. The algae live within the corals' cells -- it's a very intimate relationship. We wanted to know more about that
symbiosis12 at the sub-species level," she said.
"When we looked at individual coral colonies we found that usually one host colony harbors only one strain of algae consisting of
genetically13 identical cells," Baums said. "This wasn't clear before -- we didn't know whether there might be just one or many strains of that algal species in one coral colony."
This new insight into the coral-algae partnership has implications for studying how corals adapt to changes in water temperature. When water temperatures increase just a few degrees, this partnership breaks down and the coral can die. "It's getting hot," Baums said, "and because this relationship is symbiotic(共生的), each partner needs to respond to the changing temperature. They have to evolve together if they're going to survive."
To learn whether corals might adapt by switching to different symbiont partners over time, the researchers sampled coral colonies throughout the Caribbean over the course of several years. They found that, in most cases, the original partnership formed between a host coral and a symbiont strain
remains14 intact. "It doesn't look as if this species of coral will respond to climate change by switching partners," Baums said. "They seem to be together for life. So the colonies acquiring a different strain of algae as a way of adapting to changing climate conditions doesn't seem likely."
The researchers wanted to learn more about
gene6 flow among different populations of A. palmata corals, which would shed light on how much opportunity corals might have to switch symbionts. They examined the genetic patterns for coral hosts and algal symbionts across their Caribbean range in more than 700 colonies and found that the patterns of genetic exchange are not well matched. Symbionts exchange
genes15 over a much smaller area, "so if there would be a beneficial
mutation16 in the symbiont it would stay in a much more local area compared to the coral host," Baums explained. "That means the
evolutionary17 process between host and symbiont is more
inefficient18 than we would hope for the sake of the corals' survival," she said.
"Still, the good news is that some of those partnerships work very well as they are -- some corals may survive climate change better than others. We are just beginning to explore how species of corals and symbionts vary in their response to climate change, and also how individual combinations within species might perform differently," Baums said.