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      Natural Disease Resistance in Threatened Staghorn Corals

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      1 , 2 , * , 2 , 3
      PLoS ONE
      Public Library of Science

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          Abstract

          Disease epidemics have caused extensive damage to tropical coral reefs and to the reef-building corals themselves, yet nothing is known about the abilities of the coral host to resist disease infection. Understanding the potential for natural disease resistance in corals is critically important, especially in the Caribbean where the two ecologically dominant shallow-water corals, Acropora cervicornis and A. palmata, have suffered an unprecedented mass die-off due to White Band Disease (WBD), and are now listed as threatened under the US Threatened Species Act and as critically endangered under the IUCN Red List criteria. Here we examine the potential for natural resistance to WBD in the staghorn coral Acropora cervicornis by combining microsatellite genotype information with in situ transmission assays and field monitoring of WBD on tagged genotypes. We show that six percent of staghorn coral genotypes (3 out of 49) are resistant to WBD. This natural resistance to WBD in staghorn corals represents the first evidence of host disease resistance in scleractinian corals and demonstrates that staghorn corals have an innate ability to resist WBD infection. These resistant staghorn coral genotypes may explain why pockets of Acropora have been able to survive the WBD epidemic. Understanding disease resistance in these corals may be the critical link to restoring populations of these once dominant corals throughout their range.

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          Most cited references55

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          Landscape ecology of algal symbionts creates variation in episodes of coral bleaching.

          Reef-building corals are obligate, mutualistic symbioses of heterotrophic animals and phototrophic dinoflagellates (Symbiodinium spp.). Contrary to the earlier, widely accepted belief that corals harbour only one symbiont, we found that the ecologically dominant Caribbean corals Montastraea annularis and M. faveolata can act as hosts to dynamic, multi-species communities of Symbiodinium. Composition of these communities follows gradients of environmental irradiance, implying that physiological acclimatization is not the only mechanism by which corals cope with environmental heterogeneity. The importance of this diversity was underlined by analysis of a natural episode of coral bleaching. Patterns of bleaching could be explained by the preferential elimination of a symbiont associated with low irradiance from the brightest parts of its distribution. Comparative analyses of symbionts before and after bleaching from the same corals supported this interpretation, and suggested that some corals were protected from bleaching by hosting an additional symbiont that is more tolerant of high irradiance and temperature. This 'natural experiment' suggests that temporal and spatial variability can favour the coexistence of diverse symbionts within a host, despite the potential for destabilizing competition among them.
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            Reproduction by Fragmentation in Corals

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              Reef corals bleach to survive change.

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Editor
                Journal
                PLoS ONE
                plos
                plosone
                PLoS ONE
                Public Library of Science (San Francisco, USA )
                1932-6203
                2008
                13 November 2008
                : 3
                : 11
                : e3718
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Marine Science Center, Northeastern University, Nahant, Massachusetts, United States of America
                [2 ]Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Balboa, Panama
                [3 ]Centre for Marine Studies, University of Queensland, Queensland, Australia
                University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, United States of America
                Author notes

                Conceived and designed the experiments: SV DIK. Performed the experiments: SV DIK. Analyzed the data: SV. Wrote the paper: SV.

                Article
                08-PONE-RA-06887
                10.1371/journal.pone.0003718
                2579483
                19005565
                60a7bd3e-afde-4ff3-9654-e205521b0f67
                Vollmer, Kline. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
                History
                : 16 October 2008
                : 28 October 2008
                Page count
                Pages: 5
                Categories
                Research Article
                Ecology
                Infectious Diseases
                Ecology/Evolutionary Ecology
                Ecology/Marine and Freshwater Ecology

                Uncategorized
                Uncategorized

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