4.5 Article

Species-specific elementomes for scleractinian coral hosts and their associated Symbiodiniaceae

Journal

CORAL REEFS
Volume 41, Issue 4, Pages 1115-1130

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00338-022-02259-2

Keywords

Redfield ratios; Elemental phenotype; Elemental stoichiometry; Great Barrier Reef; Macronutrients; Trace elements

Funding

  1. CAUL
  2. University of Technology Sydney Chancellor's Postdoctoral Research Fellowship
  3. ARC Discovery Early Career Research Award [DE190100142]
  4. Australian Research Council [DE190100142] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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Research on the environmental limits of corals has progressed, but further understanding of the impact of coral's biogeochemical niche on their distribution and survival is needed.
Increasing anthropogenic pressure on coral reefs is creating an urgent need to understand how and where corals can proliferate both now and under future scenarios. Resolving environmental limits of corals has progressed through the accurate identification of corals' 'realised ecological niche'. Here we expand the ecological niche concept to account for corals' 'biogeochemical niche' (BN), defined as the chemical space in which a coral is adapted to survive, and which is identifiable by a unique quantity and proportion of elements (termed elementome). BN theory has been commonly applied to other taxa, successfully predicting species distributions and stress responses by their elementomes. Here, we apply the BN theory to corals for the first time, by using dry combustion and inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) to determine five key macronutrients and thirteen trace elements of four diverse scleractinian coral species from the Great Barrier Reef (GBR): Acropora hyacinthus; Echinopora lamellosa; Pocillopora cf. meandrina; and Pocillopora cf. verrucosa. The elementomes were investigated in both host and Symbiodiniaceae, and the latter had the highest elemental concentrations (except molybdenum). Each coral species associated with distinct members of the genus Cladocopium (determined by ITS2 analysis) with photo-physiological data suggesting specialisation of Cladocopium functional biology. Distinct endosymbiont community structure and functioning between corals with different elementomes confirms that BN theory holds as metabolic compatibility alters across host-symbiont associations. Additional work is needed to understand the plasticity of coral elementomes, and in turn BN, over space and time to aid predictions on coral distribution and survival with environmental change.

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