4.3 Article

High flow conditions mediate damaging impacts of sub-lethal thermal stress on corals' endosymbiotic algae

Journal

CONSERVATION PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/conphys/coab046

Keywords

Bio-physical; climate change; coral bleaching; flow; interactions; thermal stress

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [DP180103199]
  2. NOAA at the University of Maryland/ESSIC [NA14NES4320003]

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The study found that high water flow conditions can delay coral responses to thermal stress, but do not provide long-term protection; sustained exposure to thermal stress will eventually affect coral health.
The effects of thermal anomalies on tropical coral endosymbiosis can be mediated by a range of environmental factors, which in turn ultimately influence coral health and survival. One such factor is the water flow conditions over coral reefs and corals. Although the physiological benefits of living under high water flow are well known, there remains a lack of conclusive experimental evidence characterizing how flow mitigates thermal stress responses in corals. Here we use in situ measurements of flowin a variety of reef habitats to constrain the importance of flowspeeds on the endosymbiosis of an important reef building species under different thermal regimes. Under highflowspeeds (0.15 m s(-1)) and thermal stress, coral endosymbionts retained photosynthetic function and recovery capacity for longer compared to low flow conditions (0.03 m s(-1)). We hypothesize that this may be due to increased rates of mass transfer of key metabolites under higher flow, putatively allowing corals to maintain photosynthetic efficiency for longer. We also identified a positive interactive effect between high flow and a prestress, sub-lethal pulse in temperature. While higher flow may delay the onset of photosynthetic stress, it does not appear to confer long-term protection; sustained exposure to thermal stress (eDHW accumulation equivalent to 4.9 degrees C weeks) eventually overwhelmed the coral meta-organism as evidenced by eventual declines in photo-physiological function and endosymbiont densities. Investigating flow patterns at the scale of metres within the context of these physiological impacts can reveal interesting avenues for coral reef management. This study increases our understanding of the effects of water flow on coral reef health in an era of climate change and highlights the potential to learn from existing beneficial bio-physical interactions for the effective preservation of coral reefs into the future.

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