Tropical coral-infecting parasites discovered in cold marine ecosystems
UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA
Parasites thought only to infect tropical coral reefs have been discovered in a large variety of creatures in cold marine ecosystems along the Northeast Pacific, according to new research from University of British Columbia botanists.
The finding, published today in Current Biology, greatly expands the range of corallicolids, suggesting the parasites infect a range of organisms related to coral, like sea anemones and other cold-water marine invertebrates, around the world.
“This highlights significant blind spots in our strategies designed to sample microbial biodiversity,” says University of British Columbia biodiversity researcher Dr. Patrick Keeling, senior author on the study. “It has implications for the way we sample, measure and interpret environmental diversity, because our current approaches are clearly missing an important and potentially massive fraction of that diversity.”
Corallicolids were thought to be only associated with coral reefs based on hundreds of millions of environmental sequences—samples from soil, seawater or air, rather than directly from animals that live in the same environments. But Dr. Keeling and his team had suspicions that the way microbial diversity is surveyed in environmental sequences might be biased against certain kinds of parasites.
Luck also had a bit to do with the discovery. After discovering corallicolids in tropical reefs in 2019, subsequent COVID travel restrictions essentially forced Dr. Keeling’s team to cast their parasite nets closer to home—initially at a dock on Galiano Island, one of the southern Gulf Islands off the coast of British Columbia.
They collected 325 samples from nine species of cold-water anthozoans from non-coral reef environments at five locations in coastal British Columbia, Canada. The sampling covered a diverse range of anthozoans from cold water in temperate marine environments. Samples were screened for corallicolid infection using polymerase chain reaction—a laboratory nucleic acid amplification technique—and sequencing of nuclear small subunit rRNA.
While the parasites are correlate with coral mortality during bleaching events, it’s unclear what exact impact corallicolids have on corals—or any of the other organisms—they infect.
“It’s possible that Corallicolids have different effects depending on who they’re infecting,” says UBC researcher Morelia Trznadel, the first author of the paper. “The parasite lineages we found in our study seem to ‘jump’ between hosts quite frequently, and while they’ve already been linked to poorer responses during coral bleaching, we don’t know if they’re equally harmful to all hosts.”
In the future the researchers want to expand sampling to include potential hosts further north along the Pacific coast—including newly discovered deep-water reefs.
This work was supported by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation and the Hakai Institute.
University of British Columbia botanists have discovered parasites thought only to infect tropical coral reefs in cold marine ecosystems. A high magnification image of two corallicolid cells in a membrane.
CREDIT
Dr. Sam Livingston, University of British Columbia.
University of British Columbia botanists have discovered parasites thought only to infect tropical coral reefs in a large variety of creatures in cold marine ecosystems—including the white plumose anemone.
University of British Columbia botanists have discovered parasites thought only to infect tropical coral reefs in a large variety of creatures in cold marine ecosystems—including the white plumose anemone.
CREDIT
Patrick Keeling, University of British Columbia.
JOURNAL
Current Biology
METHOD OF RESEARCH
Observational study
SUBJECT OF RESEARCH
Animals
ARTICLE TITLE
Coral-infecting parasites in cold marine ecosystems
ARTICLE PUBLICATION DATE
11-Apr-2024
A study conducted off the coast of Biscay shows that cold-affinity algae species are gradually being replaced by warm-affinity ones
A study conducted off the coast of Biscay shows that cold-affinity algae species are gradually being replaced by warm-affinity ones
The temperature of our planet is rising rapidly. Ninety per cent of the excess heat generated has been absorbed by the sea and, as a result, the surface temperature of the oceans has risen significantly. In this context, immobile and temperature-sensitive organisms are particularly vulnerable.
In addition, there are places where the warming of the sea is more significant than in others. For example, off the Basque coast there has been a 0.23 °C increase in sea temperature per decade, compared with a global increase of 0.15 °C. Faced with this situation, the UPV/EHU's Marine Benthos Research Group explored how macroalgae communities in a coastal area off Biscay have been affected by warming. Together with the Blanes Centre for Advanced Research, the group investigated the changes that have taken place over the last 40 years. “It is important to study how macroalgae communities respond to temperature increases in order to preserve marine biodiversity, as they play essential roles in ecosystems,” said biologist Olatz Arriaga-Telleria.
One of the main conclusions drawn is the increase in warm-affinity species in the macroalgae communities off the Basque coast due to the increase in temperature, while cold-affinity ones are becoming less numerous. This has led to profound transformations in community structure, as the species that have declined the most, such as Gelidium corneum, are structuring, i.e. they create three-dimensional environments that provide refuge for a wide variety of organisms. What is more, they provide suitable habitats for other algae, fish, invertebrates, etc., where food and protection from predators, among other things, can be found. “We did not detect other species that are replacing these important ecological functions while the structuring species are in decline, which signifies a degradation of the communities,” Arriaga explained. The warm-affinity species that have proliferated are smaller and more simple in morphological terms.
Resilience of macroalgae communities
The research has also shown that macroalgae communities respond very quickly to changes in sea temperature. This can be deduced from the data over the last decade. In fact, the temperature increase has not been homogeneous over the 40 years analysed. While the general trend has been upward, the most recent period (2014-2020) investigated saw warmer temperatures. Arriaga explained that “this has allowed us to study what the short-term response of the macroalgae communities is like; we saw that over these 6 years the presence of structuring species at great depths, which had been lost, has partially recovered, while some warm-affinity species have decreased”.
Although the resilience displayed by the macroalgae gives rise to some hope, the research team stresses it does not look as if sea temperature control will be taking place right away. And given that temperature is the main cause of structural transformations in macroalgae communities, the team does not envisage an easy future. So they regard continuing the research and increasing the frequency of monitoring as essential: “This would help to better understand the behaviour of the macroalgae communities and to take proactive measures to protect the habitats of vulnerable species.” One example could be to identify the areas with the potential to become climate refugia. They are working to find solutions before the situation becomes irreversible.
Additional information
Olatz Arriaga-Tellería is a biologist and is writing up her PhD thesis with a grant from the Basque Government in the Department of Plant Biology and Ecology at the Faculty of Science and Technology of the UPV/EHU. She belongs to the Marine Benthos Research Group, which studies the impacts of climate change and pollution on macroalgae communities.
Bibliographical reference
O. Arriaga, P. Wawrzynkowski, N. Muguerza, I. Díez, J.M. Gorostiaga, E. Quintano, M.A. Becerro The thermal journey of macroalgae: Four decades of temperature-induced changes in the southeastern Bay of Biscay Marine Environmental Research DOI: 10.1016/j.marenvres.2024.106351
JOURNAL
Marine Environmental Research
METHOD OF RESEARCH
Observational study
SUBJECT OF RESEARCH
Not applicable
ARTICLE TITLE
Rising sea surface temperatures have led to profound changes in macroalgae communities
ARTICLE PUBLICATION DATE
9-Apr-2024
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