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Bio-optical properties and radiative energy budgets in fed and unfed scleractinian corals (Pocillopora sp.) during thermal bleaching
- Source :
- Heidelberg Lyndby, N, Holm, J B, Wangpraseurt, D, Ferrier-Pagès, C & Kühl, M 2019, ' Bio-optical properties and radiative energy budgets in fed and unfed scleractinian corals ( Pocillopora sp.) during thermal bleaching ', Marine Ecology-Progress Series, vol. 629, pp. 1-17 . https://doi.org/10.3354/meps13146
- Publication Year :
- 2019
- Publisher :
- Inter-Research Science Center, 2019.
-
Abstract
- © 2019 The authors. Corals live in symbiosis with algal dinoflagellates, which can achieve outstanding photo - synthetic energy efficiencies in hospite approaching theo retical limits. However, how such photosynthetic efficiency varies with environmental stress remains poorly known. Using fiber-optic and electrochemical microsensors in combination with variable chlorophyll fluorescence imaging, we investigated the combined effects of thermal stress and active feeding on the radiative energy budget and photosynthetic efficiency of the symbiotic coral Pocillopora sp. At ambient temperature (25°C), the percentage of ab sorbed light energy used for photosynthesis under low irradiance was higher for fed (∼5-6%) compared to unfed corals (4%). Corals from both feeding treatments responded equally to stress from high light ex posure (2400 μmol photons m-2 s-1), exhibiting a de crease in photosynthetic efficiency, down to 0.5-0.6%. Fed corals showed increased resilience to thermal-induced bleaching (loss of symbionts) compared to unfed corals. In addition, while unfed corals decreased their photosynthetic efficiency almost immediately when exposed to thermal stress, fed corals maintained a constant and high photosynthetic efficiency for 5 more days after onset of thermal stress. We conclude that active feeding is beneficial to corals by prolonging coral health and resilience during thermal stress as a result of an overall healthier symbiont population.
- Subjects :
- Bio optical
Ecology
biology
Coral bleaching
Chemistry
fungi
technology, industry, and agriculture
Radiant energy
biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition
Aquatic Science
biology.organism_classification
Marine Biology & Hydrobiology
Photobiology
Environmental chemistry
Thermal
population characteristics
Pocillopora
geographic locations
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 16161599 and 01718630
- Volume :
- 629
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Marine Ecology Progress Series
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....410e87a1a169465d6cc5be92bf2e3841