4.5 Article

Genetic structure of dinoflagellate symbionts in coral recruits differs from that of parental or local adults

期刊

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
卷 12, 期 9, 页码 -

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.9312

关键词

coral; mutualism; onset of symbiosis; population structure; Symbiodiniaceae; zooxanthellae

资金

  1. Division of Ocean Sciences [NSF-OCE-09-26822, NSF-OCE-15-59286]
  2. NOAA Coral Reef Conservation Program

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The symbiotic relationship between dinoflagellate algae and scleractinian corals is crucial for tropical reef ecosystems. The acquisition of symbionts by coral recruits can occur vertically from the maternal colony or horizontally from the environment. Coral species and colonies only harbor a subset of the highly diverse Symbiodiniaceae. The study examined the genetic and environmental factors influencing the acquisition of symbionts in young Orbicella faveolata recruits. The results indicate that both genetic and environmental factors play a role in determining the symbionts acquired by the coral recruits.
The symbiotic relationship between dinoflagellate algae in the family Symbiodiniaceae and scleractinian corals forms the base of the tropical reef ecosystem. In scleractinian corals, recruits acquire symbionts either vertically from the maternal colony or initially lack symbionts and acquire them horizontally from the environment. Regardless of the mode of acquisition, coral species and individual colonies harbor only a subset of the highly diverse complex of species/taxa within the Symbiodiniaceae. This suggests a genetic basis for specificity, but local environmental conditions and/or symbiont availability may also play a role in determining which symbionts within the Symbiodiniaceae are initially taken up by the host. To address the relative importance of genetic and environmental drivers of symbiont uptake/establishment, we examined the acquisition of these dinoflagellate symbionts in one to three-month-old recruits of Orbicella faveolata to compare symbiont types present in recruits to those of parental populations versus co-occurring adults in their destination reef. Variation in chloroplast 23S ribosomal DNA and in three polymorphic microsatellite loci was examined. We found that, in general, symbiont communities within adult colonies differed between reefs, suggesting that endemism is common among symbiont populations of O. faveolata on a local scale. Among recruits, initial symbiont acquisition was selective. O. faveolata recruits only acquired a subset of locally available symbionts, and these generally did not reflect symbiont populations in adults at either the parental or the outplant reef. Instead, symbiont communities within new recruits at a given outplant site and region tended to be similar to each other, regardless of parental source population. These results suggest temporal variation in the local symbiont source pool, although other possible drivers behind the distinct difference between symbionts within O. faveolata adults and new generations of recruits may include different ontogenetic requirements and/or reduced host selectivity in early ontogeny.

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