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Symbiotic specificity,association patterns,and function determine community responses to global changes: defining critical research areas for coral‐Symbiodinium symbioses
Authors:Nicholas S. Fabina  Hollie M. Putnam  Erik C. Franklin  Michael Stat  Ruth D. Gates
Affiliation:1. Department of Evolution and Ecology, University of California, , Davis, CA, 95616 USA;2. Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology, School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology, University of Hawaii, , Kaneohe, HI, 96744 USA;3. The UWA Oceans Institute and Centre for Microscopy, Characterisation and Analysis, University of Western Australia, , Perth, WA, 60096 Australia;4. Australian Institute of Marine Science, University of Western Australia, , Perth, WA, 60096 Australia;5. CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research, , Wembley, WA, 6913 Australia
Abstract:Climate change‐driven stressors threaten the persistence of coral reefs worldwide. Symbiotic relationships between scleractinian corals and photosynthetic endosymbionts (genus Symbiodinium) are the foundation of reef ecosystems, and these associations are differentially impacted by stress. Here, we couple empirical data from the coral reefs of Moorea, French Polynesia, and a network theoretic modeling approach to evaluate how patterns in coral‐Symbiodinium associations influence community stability under climate change. To introduce the effect of climate perturbations, we simulate local ‘extinctions’ that represent either the loss of coral species or the ability to engage in symbiotic interactions. Community stability is measured by determining the duration and number of species that persist through the simulated extinctions. Our results suggest that four factors greatly increase coral‐Symbiodinium community stability in response to global changes: (i) the survival of generalist hosts and symbionts maximizes potential symbiotic unions; (ii) elevated symbiont diversity provides redundant or complementary symbiotic functions; (iii) compatible symbiotic assemblages create the potential for local recolonization; and (iv) the persistence of certain traits associate with symbiotic diversity and redundancy. Symbiodinium may facilitate coral persistence through novel environmental regimes, but this capacity is mediated by symbiotic specificity, association patterns, and the functional performance of the symbionts. Our model‐based approach identifies general trends and testable hypotheses in coral‐Symbiodinium community responses. Future studies should consider similar methods when community size and/or environmental complexity preclude experimental approaches.
Keywords:Community viability analysis  interaction networks  mutualistic communities     Scleractinia     simulation models  symbiont diversity  symbiosis  zooxanthellae
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