4.5 Article

Evidence of photoacclimatization at mesophotic depths in the coral-Symbiodinium symbiosis at Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary and McGrail Bank

Journal

CORAL REEFS
Volume 37, Issue 3, Pages 779-789

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00338-018-1701-2

Keywords

Mesophotic; Zooxanthellae; Symbiodinium; Gulf of Mexico; Symbiosis; Acclimatization

Funding

  1. NOAA Office of Ocean Exploration and Research [NA09OAR4320073, NA14OAR4320260]
  2. Danbury Fund
  3. Florida Atlantic University Graduate Research and Inquiry Program grant

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Similar to shallower conspecifics, mesophotic scleractinian corals found at similar to 30-150 m depths maintain important symbioses with photosynthetic microalgae in the genus Symbiodinium. Despite the importance of coral-algal symbioses in corals' ability to thrive in multiple dynamic environments and potential role in connectivity, few studies have focused on mesophotic Symbiodinium assemblages. This study examines these assemblages in Montastraea cavernosa found at shallow (20-25 m) and mesophotic (45-50 m) depths at Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary and McGrail Bank, in the northwest Gulf of Mexico. Mesophotic corals contained significantly more Symbiodinium cells, more chlorophyll a per Symbiodinium cell, and more chlorophyll a and c(2) per unit area coral tissue than shallow corals. However, both mesophotic and shallow M. cavernosa contained similar chlorophyll c(2) per Symbiodinium cell. Next-generation sequencing of the internal transcribed spacer region (ITS2) of the ribosomal DNA indicated similar Symbiodinium assemblage diversity at all banks and between depths. All assemblages were dominated by sequences most closely related to S. goreaui, type C1, with three additional low-abundance sequences, identified as 2 C types and 1 A type, also consistently observed among colonies. Both the dominant C1 sequence and the background sequences persisted over two sampling years. These results suggest that algal symbiont assemblages will not limit connectivity potential in M. cavernosa in the northwest Gulf of Mexico. Furthermore, we hypothesize that increased Symbiodinium abundance may represent an effective light-harvesting strategy on light-limited mesophotic coral reefs.

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