4.7 Article

Lower cold tolerance of tropical Porites lutea is possibly detrimental to its migration to relatively high latitude refuges in the South China Sea

Journal

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 20, Pages 5339-5355

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.16662

Keywords

cold tolerance; coral holobionts; Porites lutea; refuges; South China Sea; whole transcriptome

Funding

  1. Guangxi Scientific Projects [AA17204074, AD17129063]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41866006, 42030502, 42090041]

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This study analyzed the physiological and gene expression differences of coral under low temperature stress. It found that tropical corals at lower latitudes had lower cold tolerance due to lower oxidative stress resistance, photosynthetic capacity, energy supply, and higher susceptibility to bacteria and viral infections. These differences in cold tolerance may hinder the migration of tropical corals to relatively high latitude refuges. This study provides a theoretical basis for anthropogenically assisted coral migration as a response to global change.
As high temperature stress due to climate change threatens tropical corals, cooler areas at relatively high latitudes may be potential refuges. Tolerance to low temperatures is critical in determining whether corals can successfully migrate to higher latitudes. However, the physiological and molecular adaptations that protect corals from low temperature stress are unclear. In this study, scleractinian Porites lutea samples from the tropical Xisha Islands (XS) and subtropical Daya Bay (DY) in the South China Sea were subjected to a reduction in ambient temperature from 26 to 12 degrees C. Differences in physiological changes and gene expression were analysed. P. lutea from both XS and DY exhibited physiological bleaching under low temperature stress, and the Symbiodiniaceae density, Fv/Fm, and chlorophyll-alpha content were significantly reduced. Symbiosome antioxidative stress and metabolic enzyme activity first increased and then decreased. RNA-seq analysis showed that the host responded to low temperature stress by activating immune, apoptotic, and autophagic pathways and reducing metabolic levels. Nevertheless, Symbiodiniaceae lacked the physiological regulatory capacity to adapt to low temperatures. The lower cold tolerance of XS tropical P. lutea may attribute to lower oxidative stress resistance, lower photosynthetic capacity, worse energy supply, and higher susceptibility to bacterial and viral infections and diseases in XS corals. The difference in cold tolerance may result from genetic differences between the geographic populations and is possibly detrimental to the migration of tropical coral to relatively high latitude refuges. This study provides a theoretical basis for anthropogenically assisted coral migration as a response to global change.

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