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Some
corals adjusting to rising ocean temperatures
Some
corals adjusting to rising ocean temperatures
Date:
April 24,
2014
Source:
Stanford University
Summary:
Scientists have revealed how some corals can quickly
switch on or off certain genes in order to survive in warmer-than-average tidal
waters. To most people, 86-degree Fahrenheit water is pleasant for bathing and
swimming. To most sea creatures, however, it's deadly. As climate change heats
up ocean temperatures, the future of species such as coral, which provides
sustenance and livelihoods to a billion people, is threatened.
......................
Research led by Stanford scientist Steve Palumbi reveals how
some corals can quickly switch on or off certain genes in order to survive in
warmer-than-average tidal waters.
To most
people, 86-degree Fahrenheit water is pleasant for bathing and swimming. To
most sea creatures, however, it's deadly. As climate change heats up ocean
temperatures, the future of species such as coral, which provides sustenance
and livelihoods to a billion people, is threatened.
Through an
innovative experiment, Stanford researchers led by biology Professor Steve
Palumbi have shown that some corals can -- on the fly -- adjust their internal
functions to tolerate hot water 50 times faster than they would adapt through
evolutionary change alone. The findings, published April 24 in Science,
open a new realm of possibility for understanding and conserving corals.
"The
temperature of coral reefs is variable, so it stands to reason that corals
should have some capacity to respond to different heat levels," said
Palumbi, director of Stanford's Hopkins Marine Station and a senior fellow at
the Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment. "Our study shows they
can, and it may help them in the future as the ocean warms."
Coral reefs
are crucial sources of fisheries, aquaculture and storm protection. Overfishing
and pollution, along with heat and increased acidity brought on by climate
change, have wiped out half of the world's reef-building corals during the past
20 years. Even atemporary rise in temperature of a few degrees can kill corals
across miles of reef.
American
Samoa presents a unique case study in how corals might survive a world reshaped
by climate change. Water temperatures in some shallow reefs there can reach 95
degrees Fahrenheit, enough to kill most corals. To find out how native corals
survive the heat, researchers in Palumbi's lab transplanted colonies from a
warm pool to a nearby cool pool and vice versa.
The
researchers found that, over time, cool-pool corals transplanted to the hot
pool became more heat-tolerant. Although these corals were only about half as
heat-tolerant as corals that had been living in the hot pool all along, they
quickly achieved the same heat tolerance that could be expected from evolution
over many generations. Corals, like people, have adaptive genes that can be
turned on or off when external conditions change. The corals Palumbi's group
studied adjusted themselves by switching on or off certain genes, depending on
the local temperature.
These
findings make clear that some corals can stave off the effects of ocean warming
through a double-decker combination of adaptation based on genetic makeup and
physiological adjustment to local conditions.
"These
results tell us that both nature and nurture play a role in deciding how
heat-tolerant a coral colony is," Palumbi said. "Nurture, the effect
of environment, can change heat tolerance much more quickly -- within the
lifetime of one coral rather than over many generations."
Palumbi
cautioned that corals' heat-adaptive characteristics do not provide a magic
bullet to combat climate change. They can't respond to indefinite temperature
increases and they could be compromised by stressors such as acidification and
pollution.
Still, if it
holds true for most corals, this adaptive ability could provide a
"cushion" for survival and might give coral reefs a few extra decades
of fighting back the harsh effects of climate change, Palumbi said.
Story
Source:
The above
story is based on materials provided by Stanford University. The original article was
written by Rob Jordan. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
Journal
Reference:
- Stephen R. Palumbi, Daniel J. Barshis, Nikki Traylor-Knowles, and Rachael A. Bay. Mechanisms of Reef Coral Resistance to Future Climate Change. Science, 24 April 2014 DOI: 10.1126/science.1251336
Cite This
Page:
Stanford University. "Some
corals adjusting to rising ocean temperatures." ScienceDaily.
ScienceDaily, 24 April 2014. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/04/140424143737.htm>.