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  4. Excess labile carbon promotes diazotroph abundance in heat-stressed octocorals
 
research article

Excess labile carbon promotes diazotroph abundance in heat-stressed octocorals

Xiang, Nan
•
Meyer, Achim
•
Pogoreutz, Claudia  
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March 15, 2023
Royal Society Open Science

Nitrogen limitation is the foundation of stable coral-algal symbioses. Diazotrophs, prokaryotes capable of fixing N-2 into ammonia, support the productivity of corals in oligotrophic waters, but could contribute to the destabilization of holobiont functioning when overstimulated. Recent studies on reef-building corals have shown that labile dissolved organic carbon (DOC) enrichment or heat stress increases diazotroph abundance and activity, thereby increasing nitrogen availability and destabilizing the coral-algal symbiosis. However, the (a)biotic drivers of diazotrophs in octocorals are still poorly understood. We investigated diazotroph abundance (via relative quantification of nifH gene copy numbers) in two symbiotic octocorals, the more mixotrophic soft coral Xenia umbellata and the more autotrophic gorgonian Pinnigorgia flava, under (i) labile DOC enrichment for 21 days, followed by (ii) combined labile DOC enrichment and heat stress for 24 days. Without heat stress, relative diazotroph abundances in X. umbellata and P. flava were unaffected by DOC enrichment. During heat stress, DOC enrichment (20 and 40 mg glucose l(-1)) increased the relative abundances of diazotrophs by sixfold in X. umbellata and fourfold in P. flava, compared with their counterparts without excess DOC. Our data suggest that labile DOC enrichment and concomitant heat stress could disrupt the nitrogen limitation in octocorals by stimulating diazotroph proliferation. Ultimately, the disruption of nitrogen cycling may further compromise octocoral fitness by destabilizing symbiotic nutrient cycling. Therefore, improving local wastewater facilities to reduce labile DOC input into vulnerable coastal ecosystems may help octocorals cope with ocean warming.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1098/rsos.221268
Web of Science ID

WOS:000971911100005

Author(s)
Xiang, Nan
Meyer, Achim
Pogoreutz, Claudia  
Raedecker, Nils
Voolstra, Christian R. R.
Wild, Christian
Gaerdes, Astrid
Date Issued

2023-03-15

Publisher

ROYAL SOC

Published in
Royal Society Open Science
Volume

10

Issue

3

Article Number

221268

Subjects

Multidisciplinary Sciences

•

Science & Technology - Other Topics

•

coral reefs

•

global warming

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organic eutrophication

•

symbiosis

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n-2 fixation

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octocoral prokaryotes

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climate-change

•

soft corals

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morphology

•

fixation

•

key

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LGB  
Available on Infoscience
May 22, 2023
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/197776
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