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      Common reef-building coral in the Northern Red Sea resistant to elevated temperature and acidification

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          Abstract

          Coral reefs are currently experiencing substantial ecological impoverishment as a result of anthropogenic stressors, and the majority of reefs are facing immediate risk. Increasing ocean surface temperatures induce frequent coral mass bleaching events—the breakdown of the nutritional photo-symbiosis with intracellular algae (genus: Symbiodinium). Here, we report that Stylophora pistillata from a highly diverse reef in the Gulf of Aqaba showed no signs of bleaching despite spending 1.5 months at 1–2°C above their long-term summer maximum (amounting to 11 degree heating weeks) and a seawater pH of 7.8. Instead, their symbiotic dinoflagellates exhibited improved photochemistry, higher pigmentation and a doubling in net oxygen production, leading to a 51% increase in primary productivity. Nanoscale secondary ion mass spectrometry imaging revealed subtle cellular-level shifts in carbon and nitrogen metabolism under elevated temperatures, but overall host and symbiont biomass proxies were not significantly affected. Now living well below their thermal threshold in the Gulf of Aqaba, these corals have been evolutionarily selected for heat tolerance during their migration through the warm Southern Red Sea after the last ice age. This may allow them to withstand future warming for a longer period of time, provided that successful environmental conservation measures are enacted across national boundaries in the region.

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          Coral reefs under rapid climate change and ocean acidification.

          Atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration is expected to exceed 500 parts per million and global temperatures to rise by at least 2 degrees C by 2050 to 2100, values that significantly exceed those of at least the past 420,000 years during which most extant marine organisms evolved. Under conditions expected in the 21st century, global warming and ocean acidification will compromise carbonate accretion, with corals becoming increasingly rare on reef systems. The result will be less diverse reef communities and carbonate reef structures that fail to be maintained. Climate change also exacerbates local stresses from declining water quality and overexploitation of key species, driving reefs increasingly toward the tipping point for functional collapse. This review presents future scenarios for coral reefs that predict increasingly serious consequences for reef-associated fisheries, tourism, coastal protection, and people. As the International Year of the Reef 2008 begins, scaled-up management intervention and decisive action on global emissions are required if the loss of coral-dominated ecosystems is to be avoided.
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            Carbohydrate analysis by a phenol-sulfuric acid method in microplate format.

            Among many colorimetric methods for carbohydrate analysis, the phenol-sulfuric acid method is the easiest and most reliable method. It has been used for measuring neutral sugars in oligosaccharides, proteoglycans, glycoproteins, and glycolipids. This method is used widely because of its sensitivity and simplicity. In its original form, it required 50-450 nmol of monosaccharides or equivalent for analysis and thus is inadequate for precious samples. A scaled-down version requiring only 10-80 nmol of sugars was reported previously. We have now modified and optimized this method to use 96-well microplates for high throughput, to gain greater sensitivity, and to economize the reagents. This modified and optimized method allows longer linear range (1-150 nmol for Man) and excellent sensitivity. Moreover, our method is more convenient, requiring neither shaking nor covering, and takes less than 15 min to complete. The speed and simplicity of this method would make it most suitable for analyses of large numbers of samples such as chromatographic fractions.
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              Mechanisms of reef coral resistance to future climate change.

              Reef corals are highly sensitive to heat, yet populations resistant to climate change have recently been identified. To determine the mechanisms of temperature tolerance, we reciprocally transplanted corals between reef sites experiencing distinct temperature regimes and tested subsequent physiological and gene expression profiles. Local acclimatization and fixed effects, such as adaptation, contributed about equally to heat tolerance and are reflected in patterns of gene expression. In less than 2 years, acclimatization achieves the same heat tolerance that we would expect from strong natural selection over many generations for these long-lived organisms. Our results show both short-term acclimatory and longer-term adaptive acquisition of climate resistance. Adding these adaptive abilities to ecosystem models is likely to slow predictions of demise for coral reef ecosystems.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                R Soc Open Sci
                R Soc Open Sci
                RSOS
                royopensci
                Royal Society Open Science
                The Royal Society Publishing
                2054-5703
                May 2017
                17 May 2017
                17 May 2017
                : 4
                : 5
                : 170038
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Laboratory for Biological Geochemistry, School of Architecture, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) , 1015 Lausanne, Switzerland
                [2 ]The Mina and Everard Goodman Faculty of Life Sciences, Bar-Ilan University , Ramat-Gan 52900, Israel
                [3 ]The Interuniversity Institute for Marine Sciences , Eilat 88103, Israel
                [4 ]Center for Advanced Surface Analysis, Institute of Earth Sciences, University of Lausanne , 1015 Lausanne, Switzerland
                Author notes
                Authors for correspondence: Thomas Krueger e-mail: thomas.krueger@ 123456epfl.ch
                Authors for correspondence: Anders Meibom e-mail: anders.meibom@ 123456epfl.ch
                Authors for correspondence: Maoz Fine e-mail: maoz.fine@ 123456biu.ac.il
                [†]

                These authors contributed equally to this work.

                Electronic supplementary material is available online at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.3744350.

                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-8132-8870
                Article
                rsos170038
                10.1098/rsos.170038
                5451809
                28573008
                00b5cb39-e54c-425e-8e66-aedf11f8e82e
                © 2017 The Authors.

                Published by the Royal Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/, which permits unrestricted use, provided the original author and source are credited.

                History
                : 13 January 2017
                : 30 March 2017
                Funding
                Funded by: Israel Science Foundation, http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100003977;
                Funded by: European Research Council Advanced Grant;
                Award ID: 246749
                Funded by: Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung, http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001711;
                Award ID: CR2312-141048
                Categories
                1001
                202
                60
                69
                Biology (Whole Organism)
                Research Article
                Custom metadata
                May, 2017

                global climate change,coral bleaching,stylophora pistillata,symbiodinium,nanosims,coral refugia

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