Ocean Acidification Partially Mitigates the Negative Effects of Warming on the Recruitment of the Coral Orbicella faveolata

Ocean acidification and ocean warming constitute major threats to many calcifying reef organisms, including scleractinian corals. The combined effects of these two environmental stressors on the earliest life history stages of reef calcifiers remain poorly studied, particularly for Atlantic corals....

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Main Authors: Pitts, Kelly A., Campbell, Justin E., Figueiredo, Joana, Fogarty, Nicole
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: NSUWorks 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://nsuworks.nova.edu/occ_facarticles/1072
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spelling ftnsoutheastern:oai:nsuworks.nova.edu:occ_facarticles-2079 2023-05-15T17:50:07+02:00 Ocean Acidification Partially Mitigates the Negative Effects of Warming on the Recruitment of the Coral Orbicella faveolata Pitts, Kelly A. Campbell, Justin E. Figueiredo, Joana Fogarty, Nicole 2020-01-23T08:00:00Z https://nsuworks.nova.edu/occ_facarticles/1072 unknown NSUWorks https://nsuworks.nova.edu/occ_facarticles/1072 Marine & Environmental Sciences Faculty Articles Climate change Fertilization Larval survivorship Settlement Western Atlantic Marine Biology Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology article 2020 ftnsoutheastern 2022-04-10T22:09:38Z Ocean acidification and ocean warming constitute major threats to many calcifying reef organisms, including scleractinian corals. The combined effects of these two environmental stressors on the earliest life history stages of reef calcifiers remain poorly studied, particularly for Atlantic corals. Here, we investigate how acidification and warming influence the fertilization success, larval survivorship, and larval settlement of the threatened Atlantic coral, Orbicella faveolata. Gametes and larvae from O. faveolata were subjected to a factorial combination of warming (ambient versus + 1.5 °C) and acidification (ambient versus − 0.2 pH units) projected to occur by the year 2050. O. faveolata individuals were maintained in the same treatments throughout all early life history stages investigated. The fertilization success of O. faveolata was not affected by acidification, warming, or their combination. However, during larval development, warming caused complete mortality and prevented any subsequent settlement. Interestingly, these negative effects of warming were mitigated when combined with ocean acidification, such that both larval survivorship and settlement increased by 41% in the combined treatment relative to the isolated warming treatment. Our research suggests that temperature-induced increases in larval metabolism may be counterbalanced by acidification, which serves to reduce larval metabolism. Notwithstanding, larval survivorship and settlement were still reduced by 50% under combined acidification and warming relative to the ambient treatment, indicating that climate change will continue to serve as major stressor during the early life history stages of corals, jeopardizing the resilience of Caribbean reefs. Article in Journal/Newspaper Ocean acidification Nova Southeastern University: NSU Works
institution Open Polar
collection Nova Southeastern University: NSU Works
op_collection_id ftnsoutheastern
language unknown
topic Climate change
Fertilization
Larval survivorship
Settlement
Western Atlantic
Marine Biology
Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology
spellingShingle Climate change
Fertilization
Larval survivorship
Settlement
Western Atlantic
Marine Biology
Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology
Pitts, Kelly A.
Campbell, Justin E.
Figueiredo, Joana
Fogarty, Nicole
Ocean Acidification Partially Mitigates the Negative Effects of Warming on the Recruitment of the Coral Orbicella faveolata
topic_facet Climate change
Fertilization
Larval survivorship
Settlement
Western Atlantic
Marine Biology
Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology
description Ocean acidification and ocean warming constitute major threats to many calcifying reef organisms, including scleractinian corals. The combined effects of these two environmental stressors on the earliest life history stages of reef calcifiers remain poorly studied, particularly for Atlantic corals. Here, we investigate how acidification and warming influence the fertilization success, larval survivorship, and larval settlement of the threatened Atlantic coral, Orbicella faveolata. Gametes and larvae from O. faveolata were subjected to a factorial combination of warming (ambient versus + 1.5 °C) and acidification (ambient versus − 0.2 pH units) projected to occur by the year 2050. O. faveolata individuals were maintained in the same treatments throughout all early life history stages investigated. The fertilization success of O. faveolata was not affected by acidification, warming, or their combination. However, during larval development, warming caused complete mortality and prevented any subsequent settlement. Interestingly, these negative effects of warming were mitigated when combined with ocean acidification, such that both larval survivorship and settlement increased by 41% in the combined treatment relative to the isolated warming treatment. Our research suggests that temperature-induced increases in larval metabolism may be counterbalanced by acidification, which serves to reduce larval metabolism. Notwithstanding, larval survivorship and settlement were still reduced by 50% under combined acidification and warming relative to the ambient treatment, indicating that climate change will continue to serve as major stressor during the early life history stages of corals, jeopardizing the resilience of Caribbean reefs.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Pitts, Kelly A.
Campbell, Justin E.
Figueiredo, Joana
Fogarty, Nicole
author_facet Pitts, Kelly A.
Campbell, Justin E.
Figueiredo, Joana
Fogarty, Nicole
author_sort Pitts, Kelly A.
title Ocean Acidification Partially Mitigates the Negative Effects of Warming on the Recruitment of the Coral Orbicella faveolata
title_short Ocean Acidification Partially Mitigates the Negative Effects of Warming on the Recruitment of the Coral Orbicella faveolata
title_full Ocean Acidification Partially Mitigates the Negative Effects of Warming on the Recruitment of the Coral Orbicella faveolata
title_fullStr Ocean Acidification Partially Mitigates the Negative Effects of Warming on the Recruitment of the Coral Orbicella faveolata
title_full_unstemmed Ocean Acidification Partially Mitigates the Negative Effects of Warming on the Recruitment of the Coral Orbicella faveolata
title_sort ocean acidification partially mitigates the negative effects of warming on the recruitment of the coral orbicella faveolata
publisher NSUWorks
publishDate 2020
url https://nsuworks.nova.edu/occ_facarticles/1072
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_source Marine & Environmental Sciences Faculty Articles
op_relation https://nsuworks.nova.edu/occ_facarticles/1072
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