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How corals react to climate change
by Staff Writers
Bochum, Germany (SPX) Nov 15, 2021

Stony corals are animals and related to jellyfish and sea anemones. As flower animals, they belong to the phylum of cnidarians.

PhD student Fabian Gosser from the Department of Animal Ecology, Evolution and Biodiversity has been studying how corals react to changing environmental conditions and how their stress response could contribute to the survival of the reefs. The RUB biologist's research focuses on the phenomenon of polyp bailout, i.e. the expulsion of small, bud-like individual corals called polyps.

Under stress, the colony of polyps that form a stony coral dissolves. The individual polyps can then settle elsewhere and form new coral colonies. The phenomenon of polyp bailout has been little studied so far - and neither has the potential of this response for the survival of the reefs. An article has been featured in the RUB's science magazine Rubin.

Corals under stress
In order to understand the corals' reactions to climate change in detail, the Bochum-based research team headed by Fabian Gosser, Dr. Maximilian Schweinsberg and Professor Ralph Tollrian is conducting experiments in research tanks by varying temperature, CO2 partial pressure and salinity.

"We subject the corals to a stress test, simulating even more dramatic environmental conditions," as Gosser outlines the approach. The biologists have already determined that different coral species react with different degrees of intensity to the stressors, such as an increase in salinity. "There are species that are more robust and species that are more sensitive," as Gosser summarises the findings.

When polyps leave the sinking ship
The PhD student's research focuses on the polyp bailout response that he observed in stony corals. "The individual polyps would detach from the coral colony in response to a temperature rise of four degrees Celsius above their tolerance and leave the sinking ship, so to speak," explains Gosser.

Even more astonishing in his opinion is that these polyps were able to start growing in a different location. The PhD student explains the significance of the reaction: "Even if only a small proportion survives the detachment process, it could have a huge impact on the preservation of the coral population, the genetic diversity, and the survival of the reefs."

Genetic mechanisms underlying the stress response
To understand the reaction in more detail, Gosser studies the bailout process at the molecular level. He analyses what happens to the polyps when they detach and which genes are switched on during bailout. For this purpose, the biologist first extracts DNA and RNA from tissue samples of stony corals that were taken at different times during the bailout process. He then sequences the complete messenger RNA, which transmits the information of the active genes as messengers, and compares the base sequence with previously decoded genomes.

"We do see that genes are switched on during the bailout process that are responsible for immune responses in humans, for example," as the biologist describes the initial results. These immune system responses during polyp bailout seem to indicate that microbial partners of the corals are involved in the response. Gosser's analyses also suggest that the polyp bailout process is a general response of corals to acute stress, regardless of the type of stressor. The journal Coral Reefs features a report on the RUB biologist's research findings.

Research Report: "Signaling pathways of heat- and hypersalinity- induced polyp bailout in pocillopora acuta"


Related Links
Department of Animal Ecology, Evolution and Biodiversity, Ruhr-Universitat Bochum, Germany
Water News - Science, Technology and Politics


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Humans guilty of breaking an oceanic law of nature
Barcelona, Spain (SPX) Nov 12, 2021
A new international study carried out by the Institute of Environmental Science and Technology of the Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona (ICTA-UAB) has examined the distribution of biomass across all life in the oceans, from bacteria to whales. Their quantification of human impact reveals a fundamental alteration to one of life's largest scale patterns. As policymakers assemble in Glasgow for the UN Climate Change Conference, there is growing recognition that human impacts on the environment are go ... read more

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