4.6 Article

Light gradients and optical microniches in coral tissues

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 3, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2012.00316

Keywords

coral photobiology; bio-optics; microenvironment; tissue optics; zooxanthellae; microsensor; microgradients; ecophysiology

Categories

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council
  2. Danish Council for Independent Research INatural Sciences
  3. Plant Functional Biology and Climate Change Cluster
  4. University of Technology Sydney

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Light quantity and quality are among the most important factors determining the physiology and stress response of zooxanthellate corals. Yet, almost nothing is known about the light field that Symbiodinium experiences within their coral host, and the basic optical properties of coral tissue are unknown. We used scalar irradiance microprobes to characterize vertical and lateral light gradients within and across tissues of several coral species. Our results revealed the presence of steep light gradients with photosynthetically available radiation decreasing by about one order of magnitude from the tissue surface to the coral skeleton. Surface scalar irradiance was consistently higher over polyp tissue than over coenosarc tissue in faviid corals. Coral bleaching increased surface scalar irradiance by similar to 150% (between 500 and 700 nm) relative to a healthy coral. Photosynthesis peaked around 300 mu m within the tissue, which corresponded to a zone exhibiting strongest depletion of scalar irradiance. Deeper coral tissue layers, e.g., similar to 1000 mu m into aboral polyp tissues, harbor optical microniches, where only similar to 10% of the incident irradiance remains. We conclude that the optical microenvironment of corals exhibits strong lateral and vertical gradients of scalar irradiance, which are affected by both tissue and skeleton optical properties. Our results imply that zooxanthellae populations inhabit a strongly heterogeneous light environment and highlight the presence of different optical microniches in corals; an important finding for understanding the photobiology, stress response, as well as the phenotypic and genotypic plasticity of coral symbionts.

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