Trophic strategy and bleaching resistance in reef-building corals

Ocean warming increases the incidence of coral bleaching, which reduces or eliminates the nutrition corals receive from their algal symbionts, often resulting in widespread mortality. In contrast to extensive knowledge on the thermal tolerance of coral-associated symbionts, the role of the coral hos...

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Main Authors: Conti-Jerpe, Inga E., Thompson, Philip D., Wong, Martin Cheong Wai, Oliveira, Nara L., Duprey, Nicolas N., Moynihan, Molly A., Baker, David M.
Other Authors: Asian School of the Environment
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/143273
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1432732020-09-26T21:37:06Z Trophic strategy and bleaching resistance in reef-building corals Conti-Jerpe, Inga E. Thompson, Philip D. Wong, Martin Cheong Wai Oliveira, Nara L. Duprey, Nicolas N. Moynihan, Molly A. Baker, David M. Asian School of the Environment Earth Observatory of Singapore Science::Geology Coral Bleaching Reefs Ocean warming increases the incidence of coral bleaching, which reduces or eliminates the nutrition corals receive from their algal symbionts, often resulting in widespread mortality. In contrast to extensive knowledge on the thermal tolerance of coral-associated symbionts, the role of the coral host in bleaching patterns across species is poorly understood. Here, we applied a Bayesian analysis of carbon and nitrogen stable isotope data to determine the trophic niche overlap between corals and their symbionts and propose benchmark values that define autotrophy, heterotrophy, and mixotrophy. The amount of overlap between coral and symbiont niche was negatively correlated with polyp size and bleaching resistance. Our results indicated that as oceans warm, autotrophic corals lose their competitive advantage and thus are the first to disappear from coral reefs. Published version 2020-08-18T07:08:07Z 2020-08-18T07:08:07Z 2020 Journal Article Conti-Jerpe, I. E., Thompson, P. D., Wong, M. C. W., Oliveira, N. L., Duprey, N. N., Moynihan, M. A., & Baker, D. M. (2020). Trophic strategy and bleaching resistance in reef-building corals. Science Advances, 6(15), eaaz5443-. doi:10.1126/sciadv.aaz5443 2375-2548 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/143273 10.1126/sciadv.aaz5443 32300659 2-s2.0-85083190392 15 6 eaaz5443 en Science Advances © 2020 The Authors, some rights reserved; exclusive licensee American Association for the Advancement of Science. No claim to original U.S. Government Works. Distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial License 4.0 (CC BY-NC). application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Geology
Coral Bleaching
Reefs
spellingShingle Science::Geology
Coral Bleaching
Reefs
Conti-Jerpe, Inga E.
Thompson, Philip D.
Wong, Martin Cheong Wai
Oliveira, Nara L.
Duprey, Nicolas N.
Moynihan, Molly A.
Baker, David M.
Trophic strategy and bleaching resistance in reef-building corals
description Ocean warming increases the incidence of coral bleaching, which reduces or eliminates the nutrition corals receive from their algal symbionts, often resulting in widespread mortality. In contrast to extensive knowledge on the thermal tolerance of coral-associated symbionts, the role of the coral host in bleaching patterns across species is poorly understood. Here, we applied a Bayesian analysis of carbon and nitrogen stable isotope data to determine the trophic niche overlap between corals and their symbionts and propose benchmark values that define autotrophy, heterotrophy, and mixotrophy. The amount of overlap between coral and symbiont niche was negatively correlated with polyp size and bleaching resistance. Our results indicated that as oceans warm, autotrophic corals lose their competitive advantage and thus are the first to disappear from coral reefs.
author2 Asian School of the Environment
author_facet Asian School of the Environment
Conti-Jerpe, Inga E.
Thompson, Philip D.
Wong, Martin Cheong Wai
Oliveira, Nara L.
Duprey, Nicolas N.
Moynihan, Molly A.
Baker, David M.
format Article
author Conti-Jerpe, Inga E.
Thompson, Philip D.
Wong, Martin Cheong Wai
Oliveira, Nara L.
Duprey, Nicolas N.
Moynihan, Molly A.
Baker, David M.
author_sort Conti-Jerpe, Inga E.
title Trophic strategy and bleaching resistance in reef-building corals
title_short Trophic strategy and bleaching resistance in reef-building corals
title_full Trophic strategy and bleaching resistance in reef-building corals
title_fullStr Trophic strategy and bleaching resistance in reef-building corals
title_full_unstemmed Trophic strategy and bleaching resistance in reef-building corals
title_sort trophic strategy and bleaching resistance in reef-building corals
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/143273
_version_ 1681059303469875200