Wednesday, April 15, 2026
News

Heat-tolerant coral may trade fast development for resilience: Study

SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend    Print this Page   COMMENT

California | November 17, 2023 11:50:35 PM IST
Algae living within coral soft tissue provide much of the energy required by their hosts, and some symbiotic algae enable corals to withstand warmer water better than others.

In a recent study led by the University of Hawaii at Manoa, researchers discovered a tradeoff for corals dominated by thermally sensitive algae: they grow faster in cooler water.

"As the ocean continues to warm, understanding how symbionts and environmental factors affect coral growth and health will help predict reef futures and inform conservation interventions where coral stocks are selected for specific traits or symbionts," said Shayle Matsuda, a doctoral student at the Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology in the UH Manoa School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology at the time of the research.

The study was co-led by Matsuda, now a postdoctoral fellow at the Shedd Aquarium, and Mariah Opalek, who conducted the experiment for her undergraduate thesis at UH Manoa. The research team investigated whether rice corals hosting symbiotic algae that can tolerate warmer water may grow more slowly, which could impact survivorship and competition for space on the reef, compared to coral hosting symbionts that are more susceptible to bleaching when ocean waters warm.

Over a two-month study period, the researchers measured the growth of rice corals dominated by heat-tolerant or heat-sensitive symbiotic algae. Additionally, they tested growth across decreasing light levels to see if the tradeoff between growth and tolerance to warm water would be affected by light, which is a major driver of the distribution of these symbionts in Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii.

"This research shows us the complexity of coral growth on a reef," said Opalek, who is now a grant support assistant at Kauai Community. "A coral's competitive advantage could be lost in a matter of a few degrees depending on what type of symbiont they associate with."

During the first month, when water temperatures were warmer, the symbiont present did not affect growth. However, over the cooler second month, corals with heat-sensitive algae grew up to 77 per cent faster than corals dominated by heat-tolerant algae, and this growth advantage increased in higher light treatments, which correlates to shallower depths on a reef.

"This means that the growth advantage associated with the thermally sensitive corals may only occur during a handful of the cooler months," said Matsuda. "As ocean warming continues, it is likely that the advantage of hosting thermally tolerant symbionts outweighs any growth advantage hosting the thermally sensitive species might." (ANI)

 
  LATEST COMMENTS ()
POST YOUR COMMENT
Comments Not Available
 
POST YOUR COMMENT
 
 
TRENDING TOPICS
 
 
CITY NEWS
MORE CITIES
 
 
 
MORE SCIENCE NEWS
More...
 
INDIA WORLD ASIA
CM Mohan Yadav to announce Madhya Prades...
Women's Reservation Bill: Revanth Reddy ...
Bill providing for increase in Lok Sabha...
Tamil Nadu polls: DMK's Chittrarasu slam...
Odisha CM expresses sorrow over 6-year-o...
Odisha: Police lathi-charge angry mob af...
More...    
 
 Top Stories
India, Germany agree to deepen stra... 
US hosts first Israel-Lebanon talks... 
US Treasury refuses extension of Ir... 
"People of West Bengal fed up with ... 
Home Minister Amit Shah holds meeti... 
Lebanon, Israel hold first direct t... 
Odisha: Police lathi-charge angry m... 
Odisha CM expresses sorrow over 6-y...