Gene expression plasticity facilitates acclimatization of a long-lived Caribbean coral across divergent reef environments
Local adaptation can increase fitness under stable environmental conditions. However, in rapidly changing environments, compensatory mechanisms enabled through plasticity may better promote fitness. Climate change is causing devastating impacts on coral reefs globally and understanding the potential...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Scientific reports 2024-04, Vol.14 (1), p.7859-7859, Article 7859 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Local adaptation can increase fitness under stable environmental conditions. However, in rapidly changing environments, compensatory mechanisms enabled through plasticity may better promote fitness. Climate change is causing devastating impacts on coral reefs globally and understanding the potential for adaptive and plastic responses is critical for reef management. We conducted a four-year, three-way reciprocal transplant of the Caribbean coral
Siderastrea siderea
across forereef, backreef, and nearshore populations in Belize to investigate the potential for environmental specialization versus plasticity in this species. Corals maintained high survival within forereef and backreef environments, but transplantation to nearshore environments resulted in high mortality, suggesting that nearshore environments present strong environmental selection. Only forereef-sourced corals demonstrated evidence of environmental specialization, exhibiting the highest growth in the forereef. Gene expression profiling 3.5 years post-transplantation revealed that transplanted coral hosts exhibited profiles more similar to other corals in the same reef environment, regardless of their source location, suggesting that transcriptome plasticity facilitates acclimatization to environmental change in
S. siderea.
In contrast, algal symbiont (
Cladocopium goreaui
) gene expression showcased functional variation between source locations that was maintained post-transplantation. Our findings suggest limited acclimatory capacity of some
S. siderea
populations under strong environmental selection and highlight the potential limits of coral physiological plasticity in reef restoration. |
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ISSN: | 2045-2322 2045-2322 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41598-024-57319-0 |