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Coral bleaching resistance variation is linked to differential mortality and skeletal growth during recovery. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Coral bleaching has raised interest in improving heat resistance in coral species, but this may come with fitness trade-offs that affect their overall health.
  • Research in Palau categorizes corals into different heat resistance levels based on pigmentation loss during heat stress, exploring both their resistance and recovery over a 6-month period.
  • Findings show that while heat resistance reduces early mortality, moderate-resistance corals excel in skeletal growth over time, indicating complex trade-offs between heat resistance and recovery that should be considered in coral management strategies.

Article Abstract

The prevalence of global coral bleaching has focused much attention on the possibility of interventions to increase heat resistance. However, if high heat resistance is linked to fitness tradeoffs that may disadvantage corals in other areas, then a more holistic view of heat resilience may be beneficial. In particular, overall resilience of a species to heat stress is likely to be the product of both resistance to heat and recovery from heat stress. Here, we investigate heat resistance and recovery among individual colonies in Palau. We divided corals into low, moderate, and high heat resistance categories based on the number of days (4-9) needed to reach significant pigmentation loss due to experimental heat stress. Afterward, we deployed corals back onto a reef in a common garden 6-month recovery experiment that monitored chlorophyll , mortality, and skeletal growth. Heat resistance was negatively correlated with mortality during early recovery (0-1 month) but not late recovery (4-6 months), and chlorophyll concentration recovered in heat-stressed corals by 1-month postbleaching. However, moderate-resistance corals had significantly greater skeletal growth than high-resistance corals by 4 months of recovery. High- and low-resistance corals on average did not exhibit skeletal growth within the observed recovery period. These data suggest complex tradeoffs may exist between coral heat resistance and recovery and highlight the importance of incorporating multiple aspects of resilience into future reef management programs.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9923480PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/eva.13500DOI Listing

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