4.7 Article

Extremely heat tolerant photo-symbiosis in a shallow marine benthic foraminifera

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 6, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/srep30930

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Funding

  1. BMBF-MOST cooperation in Marine Sciences Grant [03F0639A]
  2. Ministry of Energy and Water Resources, Israel [212-17-015]

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Bleaching, the loss of algal symbionts, occurs in marine photosymbiotic organisms at water temperatures minimally exceeding average summer SST (sea surface temperatures). Pre-adaptation allows organisms to persist under warmer conditions, providing the tolerance can be carried to new habitats. Here we provide evidence for the existence of such adaptation in the benthic foraminifera Pararotalia calcariformata. This species occurs at a thermally polluted site in the Mediterranean, where water temperatures reach a maxima daily average of 36 degrees C during the summer. To test whether this occurrence represents a widespread adaptation, we conducted manipulative experiments exposing this species from an unpolluted site to elevated temperatures (20-42 degrees C). It was kept in co-culture with the more thermally sensitive foraminifera Amphistegina lobifera in two experiments (20-36 degrees C). Reduced photosynthetic activity in A. lobifera occurred at 32 degrees C whereas photochemical stress in P. calcariformata was first observed during exposure to 36 degrees C. Pararotalia calcariformata survived all treatment conditions and grew under 36 degrees C. The photosymbiosis in P. calcariformata is unusually thermally tolerant. These observations imply that marine eukaryote-eukaryote photosymbiosis can respond to elevated temperatures by drawing on a pool of naturally occurring pre-adaptations. It also provides a perspective on the massive occurrence of symbiont-bearing foraminifera in the early Cenozoic hothouse climate.

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