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Using naturally occurring climate resilient corals to construct bleaching-resistant nurseries
by
Palumbi, Stephen R.
, Morikawa, Megan K.
in
Animals
/ Anthozoa - microbiology
/ Anthozoa - physiology
/ Aquaculture - methods
/ Biological Sciences
/ Biomarkers
/ Bleaching
/ Climate Change
/ Colonies
/ Coral Reefs
/ Corals
/ Environmental restoration
/ Environmental Restoration and Remediation - methods
/ Genetic diversity
/ Genotypes
/ Heat stress
/ Heat tolerance
/ Heat-Shock Response
/ Meadows
/ Microclimate
/ Parents
/ Restoration
/ Species
/ Sustainability Science
/ Symbionts
/ Symbiosis
/ Temperature tolerance
/ Thermal stress
/ Thermotolerance
2019
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Using naturally occurring climate resilient corals to construct bleaching-resistant nurseries
by
Palumbi, Stephen R.
, Morikawa, Megan K.
in
Animals
/ Anthozoa - microbiology
/ Anthozoa - physiology
/ Aquaculture - methods
/ Biological Sciences
/ Biomarkers
/ Bleaching
/ Climate Change
/ Colonies
/ Coral Reefs
/ Corals
/ Environmental restoration
/ Environmental Restoration and Remediation - methods
/ Genetic diversity
/ Genotypes
/ Heat stress
/ Heat tolerance
/ Heat-Shock Response
/ Meadows
/ Microclimate
/ Parents
/ Restoration
/ Species
/ Sustainability Science
/ Symbionts
/ Symbiosis
/ Temperature tolerance
/ Thermal stress
/ Thermotolerance
2019
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Do you wish to request the book?
Using naturally occurring climate resilient corals to construct bleaching-resistant nurseries
by
Palumbi, Stephen R.
, Morikawa, Megan K.
in
Animals
/ Anthozoa - microbiology
/ Anthozoa - physiology
/ Aquaculture - methods
/ Biological Sciences
/ Biomarkers
/ Bleaching
/ Climate Change
/ Colonies
/ Coral Reefs
/ Corals
/ Environmental restoration
/ Environmental Restoration and Remediation - methods
/ Genetic diversity
/ Genotypes
/ Heat stress
/ Heat tolerance
/ Heat-Shock Response
/ Meadows
/ Microclimate
/ Parents
/ Restoration
/ Species
/ Sustainability Science
/ Symbionts
/ Symbiosis
/ Temperature tolerance
/ Thermal stress
/ Thermotolerance
2019
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Using naturally occurring climate resilient corals to construct bleaching-resistant nurseries
Journal Article
Using naturally occurring climate resilient corals to construct bleaching-resistant nurseries
2019
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Overview
Ecological restoration of forests, meadows, reefs, or other foundational ecosystems during climate change depends on the discovery and use of individuals able to withstand future conditions. For coral reefs, climate-tolerant corals might not remain tolerant in different environments because of widespread environmental adjustment of coral physiology and symbionts. Here, we test if parent corals retain their heat tolerance in nursery settings, if simple proxies predict successful colonies, and if heat-tolerant corals suffer lower growth or survival in normal settings. Before the 2015 natural bleaching event in American Samoa, we set out 800 coral fragments from 80 colonies of four species selected by prior tests to have a range of intraspecific natural heat tolerance. After the event, nursery stock from heat-tolerant parents showed two to three times less bleaching across species than nursery stock from less tolerant parents. They also retained higher individual genetic diversity through the bleaching event than did less heat-tolerant corals. The three best proxies for thermal tolerance were response to experimental heat stress, location on the reef, and thermal microclimate. Molecular biomarkers were also predictive but were highly species specific. Colony geno-type and symbiont genus played a similarly strong role in predicting bleaching. Combined, our results show that selecting for host and symbiont resilience produced a multispecies coral nursery that withstood multiple bleaching events, that proxies for thermal tolerance in restoration can work across species and be inexpensive, and that different coral clones within species reacted very differently to bleaching.
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