Data from: Assessing the effects of iron enrichment across holobiont compartments reveals reduced microbial nitrogen fixation in the Red Sea coral Pocillopora verrucosa
The productivity of coral reefs in oligotrophic tropical waters is sustained by an efficient uptake and recycling of nutrients. In reef-building corals, the engineers of these ecosystems, this nutrient recycling is facilitated by a constant exchange of nutrients between the animal host and endosymbi...
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Zusammenfassung: | The productivity of coral reefs in oligotrophic tropical waters is
sustained by an efficient uptake and recycling of nutrients. In
reef-building corals, the engineers of these ecosystems, this nutrient
recycling is facilitated by a constant exchange of nutrients between the
animal host and endosymbiotic photosynthetic dinoflagellates
(zooxanthellae), bacteria, and other microbes. Due to the complex
interactions in this so-called coral holobiont, it has proven difficult to
understand the environmental limitations of productivity in corals. Among
others, the micronutrient iron has been proposed to limit primary
productivity due to its essential role in photosynthesis and bacterial
processes. Here, we tested the effect of iron enrichment on the physiology
of the coral Pocillopora verrucosa from the central Red Sea during a
12-day experiment. Contrary to previous reports, we did not see an
increase in zooxanthellae population density or gross photosynthesis.
Conversely, respiration rates were significantly increased, and microbial
nitrogen fixation was significantly decreased. Taken together, our data
suggest that iron is not a limiting factor of primary productivity in Red
Sea corals. Rather, increased metabolic demands in response to iron
enrichment, as evidenced by increased respiration rates, may reduce carbon
(i.e., energy) availability in the coral holobiont, resulting in reduced
microbial nitrogen fixation. This decrease in nitrogen supply in turn may
exacerbate the limitation of other nutrients, creating a negative feedback
loop. Thereby, our results highlight that the effects of iron enrichment
appear to be strongly dependent on local environmental conditions and
ultimately may depend on the availability of other nutrients. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.n50jf |