Coral Reefs Flashcards

1
Q

What are corals?

A

Most primary reef-building corals are colonial
calcifying Anthozoans

Anthozoa is a Class of ~6,000 species within Cnidaria that exist only as polyps, never as medusae

True stony corals are in the order Scleratinia

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2
Q

Coral Biology

A

Scleratinian reef corals form an aragonite corallum (colonial skeleton) composed of individual cuplike corallites around and under each polyp
Aragonite is one of two common naturally occurring crystal forms of calcium carbonate, CaCO3

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3
Q

Coral Growth

A

Growth occurs on top of previous calcification. Growth
in some Acropora corals can be >100mm annually

Large coral colonies can grow to several metres in height and weigh several tons, but the living tissue is typically <1mm thick on surface

Rates of calcification are controlled by both the function of a specific calicoblastic tissue (probably via direct roll in crystal formation), and photosynthetic contributions of symbiotic zooxanthellae

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4
Q

As a general rule, the large, reef-building (hermatypic) Scleratinian corals typical of shallow tropical seas (i.e. primary reef builders) are

A

zooxanthellate, i.e. contain algal symbionts

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5
Q

The Zooxanthellae

Symbiosis

A

Most scleratinian corals in shallow, tropical waters the have a symbiotic relationship with dinoflagellates of genus Symbiodinium

> 100 genotypes of Symbiodinium have been identified, some widely distributed across coral species, others restricted to particular hosts or environments

Zooxanthellae are packed within host gastrodermal cells (i.e. intracellular symbionts), 1-3 or more per cell, with typically c. 1,500,000 symbiont cells per cm2

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6
Q

The Three Roles of Zooxanthellae

A

Influence calcification process
Provide nutritional material to their hosts
Take up host waste products

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7
Q

Light-Enhanced Calcification

A

Light, photosynthesis, and calcification are
intimately linked

A cloudy day can reduce carbonate deposition
by 50%

Carbonate production 3x higher during day than
at night

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8
Q

Zooxanthellae and Coral

Nutrition

A

Carbon fixed by photosynthesis is translocated to the host in the form of animo and fatty acids, glucose, and glycerol

In some conditions photosynthesis respiration ratio can be >1 i.e. all metabolic requirements met by photosynthesis, and the symbiosis is autotrophic

This varies substantially with light, depth, season, habitat, etc.

Most corals do feed heterotrophically too, which significantly increases both tissue growth and calcification rates

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9
Q

Uptake of Waste Products

A

Zooxanthellae take up from their hosts significant quantities of nutrients including phosphorus and nitrogen

They transform these into organic compounds
and transfer them back to their hosts

Ammonium and nitrate are potentially toxic waste products to the coral, so the zooxanthellae act as metabolic kidneys

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10
Q

Coral Basics: Summary

A

The primary reef building organisms are simple animals that rely on symbiotic zooxanthellae in order to function efficiently

The symbiosis enables reef building corals to
exist in nutrient-poor shallow tropical waters

Some of the most biodiverse, complex, and productive ecosystems on earth are dependent on the success of this symbiosis

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11
Q

Corals and Stress

A

Reef corals are generally intolerant of environmental change, including:

  • reduced salinity
  • prolonged low tides
  • disease
  • pollution
  • temperature extremes
  • high light levels
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12
Q

Coral Stress Responses

A

At threshold levels:
- increased mucus secretion, polyp withdrawal

Beyond physiological thresholds:
- zooxanthellae symbionts are expelled = coral bleaching

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13
Q

Coral Bleaching

A

Complex reaction based on the physiology, biochemistry and genetics of both partners

The most obvious cases of bleaching result in the host tissue becoming transparent

This reveals the bleached white aragonite skeleton beneath

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14
Q

Not all bleaching is worrying

A

Sometimes it reflects natural seasonal variation

These cyclical changes are called physiological bleaching

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15
Q

Severe bleaching is accompanied by a loss of 60-90% of symbiont cells

A

There is usually an accompanying reduction in host tissue biomass

Bleaching is thus more than just a loss of photosynthetic capacity

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16
Q

Temperature and bleaching

A

Most reef corals are sensitive to small increases in temperature

Just 1-2°C above normal summer highs is sufficient to induce bleaching

El Niños generate wide swaths of such conditions, with sea temperatures >30-32°C widespread in the tropics

17
Q

Previous mass bleachings

A

The super El Nino of 1998 caused coral mortality across the tropics
Coral coverage was reduced by >90% in many parts of the Indian Ocean (similar patterns in the pacific, carribean)
This bleaching event was unprecedented in global scope and severity

16% of the worlds corals were lost in shallow water reefs

18
Q

Extreme el nino events are a major cause of mass bleaching

A

anomalously hot conditions not associated with el nino are also important

climate change interacts with natural processes to increase the severity and frequency of bleaching events

Interactions with other stressors make results more serious and make recovery less likely

19
Q

Ecosystem effects of coral bleaching

A

corals provide habitat for a huge diversity of other organisms

many species entirely dependent on healthy corals for habitat and for food

coral cover and topographic complexity particularly important for fish

climate change now a major threat for reef fish communities

20
Q

“In 2016, record ocean temperatures have led to record widespread coral bleaching on Australian coral reefs.

A

This bleaching is part of the ongoing third global bleaching event… Between February and May, the Great Barrier Reef experienced record warm sea surface temperatures.”

21
Q

Surface temperature of the earth

A

will rise 4°C

22
Q

Other stressors (e.g. acidifications, over-exploitation) are

A

reducing the capacity of corals to recover

23
Q

Tropical reef systems are transitioning into a new era in which the interval between recurrent bouts of coral bleaching is too short for a full recovery of mature assemblages

A

The median return time between pairs of severe bleaching events has diminished steadily since 1980 and is now only 6 years

24
Q

Annual bleaching may

A

become the norm in the coming decades