Skip to content
Environment, Science

Adult coral can handle more heat and keep growing thanks to heat-evolved symbionts

Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) 3 mins read

Adult coral can handle more heat and keep growing thanks to heat-evolved symbionts

 

** Embargoed until 0601 IST / 1131 AEDT Thursday 2 November **

 

Adult fragments of a coral species can better tolerate bleaching and recover faster when treated with tougher heat-evolved symbionts, new research from the Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) and the University of Melbourne indicates.

 

The study also found that treatment with the heat-evolved symbionts did not compromise the coral’s ability to grow. This differs from previous studies on Great Barrier Reef corals which found that naturally heat tolerant symbionts could enhance heat resistance in adult corals, but at a cost to its growth.

 

Symbionts are the tiny cells of algae that live inside the coral tissue, providing corals with energy to grow. The survival of reef-building corals depends on this mutually beneficial relationship.

 

The symbionts used in this study had their heat tolerance bolstered in the lab by exposing multiple generations to elevated temperatures for 10 years. Adult coral fragments of a single species, Galaxea fascicularsis, that had been chemically bleached were then offered the heat-evolved symbionts. The scientists found the symbionts were able to maintain a symbiosis with adult corals for two years, promoting faster coral recovery from bleaching and enhancing their heat tolerance without trading off on growth.

 

Lead author on the study Dr Wing Yan Chan from AIMS and the University of Melbourne said the new findings suggest that heat-evolved algal symbionts are a potentially valuable resource for reef restoration applicable across coral species and life stages.

 

“These symbionts were still detected in the corals in moderate abundance two years after the corals were first inoculated, suggesting long-term stability of this symbiosis and potential long-term benefits to coral heat tolerance,” she said.

 

“Strategies to enhance coral heat tolerance can buy time for reefs, which are threatened by climate change-driven marine heatwaves causing bleaching and sometimes mortality. The long-term stability of the symbiosis offers hope they may be able to provide benefits to their coral hosts for many years.”

 

Professor Madeleine van Oppen from AIMS and the University of Melbourne, who is the senior author on the research, said earlier work in her group had shown the benefits of associating heat-evolved symbionts with coral larvae and juveniles.

 

“These new findings on adult coral close the circle and demonstrate the advantages are not lost in adulthood,” she said.

 

“This approach is one of several referred to as ‘assisted evolution’, which involves active interventions to accelerate the rate of naturally occurring evolutionary processes.”

 

Dr Chan said the next critical step of this research will be controlled field trials before it could be determined whether the intervention could work outside of the laboratory, with more than one coral type and at scale.

 

Dr Line Bay, a Research Program Director from AIMS who oversees AIMS’ coral focussed work within the Reef Restoration and Adaptation Program (RRAP), said the work was an important step in the research on enhancing heat tolerance in corals.

 

“This study is part of the extensive work AIMS, our partners and collaborators are doing to protect corals from climate change,” she said.

 

“To give coral reefs the best chance of survival, we need to reduce emissions, ensure coral reef systems are managed well, and develop interventions like heat-evolved symbionts to help boost climate tolerance and resilience for reefs.”

 

The research was a collaboration between AIMS, the University of Melbourne, Monash Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences and the Melbourne Centre for Nanofabrication.

 

The research was funded by the Australian Research Council, the Paul G. Allen Family Foundation and RRAP, which is funded by a partnership between the Australian Government’s Reef Trust and the Great Barrier Reef Foundation.

 

The Chan et al paper ‘Heat evolved algal symbionts enhance bleaching tolerance of adult corals without trade off against growth’ was published in Global Change Biology today (Thursday, 2 November).

 

Images are available here.


About us:

More about the Australian Institute of Marine Science:  

The Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) is Australia’s tropical marine research agency. In existence for half a century, it plays a pivotal role in providing large-scale, long-term and world-class research that helps governments, industry and the wider community to make informed decisions about the management of Australia’s marine estate. AIMS science leads to healthier marine ecosystems; economic, social and environmental benefits for all Australians; and protection of coral reefs from climate change. More here: https://www.aims.gov.au/ 


Contact details:

Jo Manning

AIMS Communications Officer:

media@aims.gov.au; 0456 196845

Media

More from this category

  • Agriculture Farming Rural, Environment
  • 07/12/2024
  • 11:48
Friends of the Earth Australia

Are Biosolids and Compost a Source of PFAS Pollution in the Belabula River?

In early 2024, farmers living in proximity to the Belabula River in New South Wales (part of the Lachlan River catchment inWiradyuricountry), reported foam containing PFAS along a stretch of the river. Local residents collected samples of the foam and subsequent analysis found that the foam was detected at 1800 times the safe drinking water limit and 4000 times the 99% ecological trigger level. The pollution was reported by the ABC in August 2024 with the NSW EPA starting an investigation a few months earlier. The pollution is a major environmental headache. Could the same scenario occur in other rivers…

  • Environment
  • 06/12/2024
  • 12:43
NSW EPA

ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTIONS TO BE STRENGTHENED ON COAL MINE LICENCES

The NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA) will work with licensees to strengthen environmental protections on coal mine licences, following extensive community consultation and our statutory five-yearly licence review. NSW EPA CEO Tony Chappel said a range of licence variations will be considered in the short, medium and long term on 59 coal mine licences across the Hunter, Central West and Illawarra to ensure best practice operations and reduced environmental impacts. “Coal mines operate in a number of different NSW communities and it’s important they do so responsibly to reduce their air, noise and water impact on neighbours and the environment,”…

  • Contains:
  • Environment, International News
  • 06/12/2024
  • 12:01
Humane Society International (HSI) Australia

Icelandic government grants five-year licence to kill fin and minke whales

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 6 December 2024 Statement: We are utterly dismayed by the interim Icelandic government’s decision to grant a five-year licence to kill…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.