The larva-Symbiodiniaceae association at risk: putative impacts of climate change on reproduction, dispersal, and recruitment in coral reefs

The relationship between invertebrates and Symbiodiniaceae dinoflagellates is the ecological foundation of diverse and productive coral reef ecosystems. Climate change-induced breakdown of this partnership, i.e., bleaching, is repeatedly driving widespread reef degradation. Thus, the future trajectory of this ecosystem depends on the reproduction and dispersal capacity of invertebrate-Symbiodiniaceae symbiosis. This review examines how climate change affects the biology of larvae from three invertebrate phyla—Porifera, Cnidaria, and Mollusca—that host Symbiodiniaceae, focusing on differences in symbiont transmission mode, symbiont location, and the larvae´s reliance on these associations. Due to limited research on Porifera and Mollusca hosts, most knowledge of larvae-Symbiodiniaceae associations stems from coral larvae patterns. The myriads of combinations of genetic and ecophysiologically distinct hosts and symbionts result in highly context-dependent responses to warming, but symbiotic larvae tend to be more susceptible to oxidative stress and show higher mortality than aposymbiotic larvae. While ocean acidification has little direct effect on the algal symbionts, it impacts larvae variably, especially calcifying larvae (e.g., mollusks), which suffer from impaired calcification and higher mortality. Climate change also impairs the reproductive processes of Symbiodiniaceae-bearing invertebrates, reducing gamete output, causing asynchronous spawning, and lowering larval survival. These effects will result in a persistent decline in recruitment with increased larval retention, consequently reducing reef connectivity and genetic diversity, thus weakening ecosystem resilience. This underscores the urgent need to hasten knowledge on larval ecology under climate change and the functional role of symbionts to better inform marine conservation planning and to incorporate larval ecology in the future predictions.

Loures A., Rädecker N., Voolstra C. R., Garrido A. G., Zilberberg C., Faria S. C., Sumida P. Y. G. & Mies M., in press. The larva-Symbiodiniaceae association at risk: putative impacts of climate change on reproduction, dispersal, and recruitment in coral reefs. Coral Reefs. Article.


Subscribe

Search

  • Reset

OA-ICC Highlights

Resources


Discover more from Ocean Acidification

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading