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  4. Standardized short‐term acute heat stress assays resolve historical differences in coral thermotolerance across microhabitat reef sites
 
research article

Standardized short‐term acute heat stress assays resolve historical differences in coral thermotolerance across microhabitat reef sites

Voolstra, Christian R.
•
Buitrago‐López, Carol
•
Perna, Gabriela
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June 22, 2020
Global Change Biology

coral thermotolerance differences reflective of in situ reef temperature thresholds. Using a suite of physiological parameters (photosynthetic efficiency, coral whitening, chlorophyll a , host protein, algal symbiont counts, and algal type association), we as- sessed bleaching susceptibility of Stylophora pistillata colonies from the windward/ exposed and leeward/protected sites of a nearshore coral reef in the central Red Sea, which had previously shown differential mortality during a natural bleaching event. Photosynthetic efficiency was most indicative of the expected higher thermal tolerance in corals from the protected reef site, denoted by an increased retention of dark-adapted maximum quantum yields at higher temperatures. These differ- ences were resolved using both experimental setups, as corroborated by a positive linear relationship, not observed for the other parameters. Notably, short-term acute heat stress assays resolved per-colony (genotype) differences that may have been masked by acclimation effects in the long-term experiment. Using our newly devel- oped portable experimental system termed the Coral Bleaching Automated Stress System (CBASS), we thus highlight the potential of mobile, standardized short-term acute heat stress assays to resolve fine-scale differences in coral thermotolerance. Accordingly, such a system may be suitable for large-scale determination and com- plement existing approaches to identify resilient genotypes/reefs for downstream ex- perimental examination and prioritization of reef sites for conservation/restoration. Development of such a framework is consistent with the recommendations of the National Academy of Sciences and the Reef Restoration and Adaptation Program committees for new intervention and restoration strategies.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1111/gcb.15148
Author(s)
Voolstra, Christian R.
Buitrago‐López, Carol
Perna, Gabriela
Cárdenas, Anny
Hume, Benjamin C. C.
Rädecker, Nils  
Barshis, Daniel J.
Date Issued

2020-06-22

Published in
Global Change Biology
Volume

26

Start page

4328

End page

4343

Subjects

climate change

•

coral bleaching

•

coral reef

•

heat stress

•

Red Sea

•

resilience

•

thermal stress assay

•

Coral Bleaching Automated Stress System (CBASS)

Note

This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License.

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
LGB  
Available on Infoscience
June 22, 2020
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/169529
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