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Climate change promotes parasitism in a coral symbiosis
by
Freeman, Christopher J.
, Wong, Jane C.Y.
, Fogel, Marilyn L.
, Knowlton, Nancy
, Baker, David M.
in
45/23
/ 45/77
/ 631/158/2165
/ 704/158/2466
/ 704/47
/ Acclimatization - physiology
/ Animals
/ Anthozoa - metabolism
/ Anthozoa - physiology
/ Anthropogenic factors
/ Aquatic habitats
/ Assimilation
/ Biodiversity
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Bleaching
/ Carbon
/ Carbon - metabolism
/ Climate Change
/ Coral Reefs
/ Corals
/ Cyanobacteria - metabolism
/ Cyanobacteria - physiology
/ Dinoflagellida - metabolism
/ Dinoflagellida - physiology
/ Ecology
/ Energy measurement
/ Eutrophication
/ Evolutionary Biology
/ Fitness
/ Life Sciences
/ Microbial Ecology
/ Microbial Genetics and Genomics
/ Microbiology
/ Net Primary Productivity
/ Nitrogen
/ Nitrogen - metabolism
/ Nutrition
/ Oceans
/ Parasitism
/ Photosynthates
/ Reproductive fitness
/ Respiration
/ Stable isotopes
/ Symbiodinium
/ Symbiosis
/ Symbiosis - physiology
/ Temperature
/ Translocation
2018
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Climate change promotes parasitism in a coral symbiosis
by
Freeman, Christopher J.
, Wong, Jane C.Y.
, Fogel, Marilyn L.
, Knowlton, Nancy
, Baker, David M.
in
45/23
/ 45/77
/ 631/158/2165
/ 704/158/2466
/ 704/47
/ Acclimatization - physiology
/ Animals
/ Anthozoa - metabolism
/ Anthozoa - physiology
/ Anthropogenic factors
/ Aquatic habitats
/ Assimilation
/ Biodiversity
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Bleaching
/ Carbon
/ Carbon - metabolism
/ Climate Change
/ Coral Reefs
/ Corals
/ Cyanobacteria - metabolism
/ Cyanobacteria - physiology
/ Dinoflagellida - metabolism
/ Dinoflagellida - physiology
/ Ecology
/ Energy measurement
/ Eutrophication
/ Evolutionary Biology
/ Fitness
/ Life Sciences
/ Microbial Ecology
/ Microbial Genetics and Genomics
/ Microbiology
/ Net Primary Productivity
/ Nitrogen
/ Nitrogen - metabolism
/ Nutrition
/ Oceans
/ Parasitism
/ Photosynthates
/ Reproductive fitness
/ Respiration
/ Stable isotopes
/ Symbiodinium
/ Symbiosis
/ Symbiosis - physiology
/ Temperature
/ Translocation
2018
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Climate change promotes parasitism in a coral symbiosis
by
Freeman, Christopher J.
, Wong, Jane C.Y.
, Fogel, Marilyn L.
, Knowlton, Nancy
, Baker, David M.
in
45/23
/ 45/77
/ 631/158/2165
/ 704/158/2466
/ 704/47
/ Acclimatization - physiology
/ Animals
/ Anthozoa - metabolism
/ Anthozoa - physiology
/ Anthropogenic factors
/ Aquatic habitats
/ Assimilation
/ Biodiversity
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Bleaching
/ Carbon
/ Carbon - metabolism
/ Climate Change
/ Coral Reefs
/ Corals
/ Cyanobacteria - metabolism
/ Cyanobacteria - physiology
/ Dinoflagellida - metabolism
/ Dinoflagellida - physiology
/ Ecology
/ Energy measurement
/ Eutrophication
/ Evolutionary Biology
/ Fitness
/ Life Sciences
/ Microbial Ecology
/ Microbial Genetics and Genomics
/ Microbiology
/ Net Primary Productivity
/ Nitrogen
/ Nitrogen - metabolism
/ Nutrition
/ Oceans
/ Parasitism
/ Photosynthates
/ Reproductive fitness
/ Respiration
/ Stable isotopes
/ Symbiodinium
/ Symbiosis
/ Symbiosis - physiology
/ Temperature
/ Translocation
2018
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Journal Article
Climate change promotes parasitism in a coral symbiosis
2018
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Overview
Coastal oceans are increasingly eutrophic, warm and acidic through the addition of anthropogenic nitrogen and carbon, respectively. Among the most sensitive taxa to these changes are scleractinian corals, which engineer the most biodiverse ecosystems on Earth. Corals’ sensitivity is a consequence of their evolutionary investment in symbiosis with the dinoflagellate alga,
Symbiodinium
. Together, the coral holobiont has dominated oligotrophic tropical marine habitats. However, warming destabilizes this association and reduces coral fitness. It has been theorized that, when reefs become warm and eutrophic, mutualistic
Symbiodinium
sequester more resources for their own growth, thus parasitizing their hosts of nutrition. Here, we tested the hypothesis that sub-bleaching temperature and excess nitrogen promotes symbiont parasitism by measuring respiration (costs) and the assimilation and translocation of both carbon (energy) and nitrogen (growth; both benefits) within
Orbicella faveolata
hosting one of two
Symbiodinium
phylotypes using a dual stable isotope tracer incubation at ambient (26 °C) and sub-bleaching (31 °C) temperatures under elevated nitrate. Warming to 31 °C reduced holobiont net primary productivity (NPP) by 60% due to increased respiration which decreased host %carbon by 15% with no apparent cost to the symbiont. Concurrently,
Symbiodinium
carbon and nitrogen assimilation increased by 14 and 32%, respectively while increasing their mitotic index by 15%, whereas hosts did not gain a proportional increase in translocated photosynthates. We conclude that the disparity in benefits and costs to both partners is evidence of symbiont parasitism in the coral symbiosis and has major implications for the resilience of coral reefs under threat of global change.
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK,Oxford University Press
Subject
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