4.5 Article

Can colony resizing represent a strategy for octocorals to face climate warming? The case of the precious red coral Corallium rubrum

Journal

CORAL REEFS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00338-023-02365-9

Keywords

Octocorallia; Mesophotic; North-Western Mediterranean Sea; Animal forests; Norm of reaction; Fragmentation

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Modular colonial benthic organisms have the ability to adapt to fluctuations in environmental factors through phenotypic plasticity. However, abrupt environmental changes can limit their adaptive capabilities, leading to mass mortalities. Decreased body size is a common response to global warming in both terrestrial and aquatic organisms.
Modular colonial benthic organisms exhibit high phenotypic plasticity, which is considered an effective strategy when faced with fluctuations in abiotic and biotic factors. However, when environmental changes occur abruptly, organisms' adaptive capabilities can be limited, leading to the death of some colonies or to mass mortalities. Additionally, a decrease in body size has been proposed as one of the most common responses in both terrestrial and aquatic organisms to face global warming. Here, temperate corals' response to thermal stress was documented using the precious red coral Corallium rubrum as a model species. The increased frequency of marine heat waves recorded in the north-western Mediterranean has led to a decrease in the total number of colonies of the analysed populations and reduced colony size in those that have survived, likely through fragmentation and branch loss. The laboratory analyses carried out on collected fragments showed an unexpected swelling, similar to resorption. Additionally, the occurrence of regular sclerite-like protuberances, typical of a normal skeleton surface, suggested a regeneration process. The documented phenomenon supports the hypothesis that C. rubrum exhibits an adaptive behaviour via the autotomy of branches, providing it with an unexpected resilience against climate anomalies thanks to phenotypic plasticity.

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