Scleractinian corals may acquire
Symbiodinium from their parents (vertically) or from the environment (horizontally). In the present study, adult colonies of the coral
Acropora longicyathus from One Tree Island (OTI) on the southern Great Barrier Reef (Australia) acquired two distinct varieties of symbiotic dinoflagellates
(
Symbiodinium) from the environment. Adult colonies had either
Symbiodinium from clade C (86.7%) or clade A (5.3%), or a mixture of both clades A and C (8.0% of all colonies). In contrast, all 10-day-old
juveniles were associated with
Symbiodinium from clade A, while 83-day-old colonies contained clades A, C and D even though they were growing at the same location.
Symbiodinium from clade A were dominant in both 10- and 83-day-old juveniles (99 and 97% of all recruits, respectively), while clade D
was also found in 31% of 83-day-old juveniles. Experimental manipulation also revealed that parental association (with clade
A or C), or the location within the OTI reef, did not influence which clade of symbiont was acquired by juvenile corals. The
differences between the genetic identity of populations of
Symbiodinium resident in juveniles and adult
A. longicyathus suggest that ontogenetic changes in the symbiosis may occur during the development of scleractinian corals. Whether or not
these changes are due to host selective processes or differences in the physical environment associated with juvenile versus
adult colonies remains to be determined.
Keywords
Symbiodinium
-
Acropora longicyathus
- Coral recruit - Symbiont acquisition - Symbiosis - Dinoflagellate
Communicated by Biology Editor M. van Oppen.