萌妹社区


Heat-tolerant algal symbionts could be key to protecting Florida's endangered elkhorn coral

Heat-tolerant symbionts a critical key to protecting Florida's elkhorn coral from bleaching during marine heatwaves
University of Miami Rosenstiel scientists Rich Karp (left) and Fabrizio Lepiz-Conejo, examine elkhorn coral fragments from one of the coral restoration nursery sites used in the study. Credit: Hilary Wind, Shedd Aquarium.

A study in the journal Coral Reefs reveals that heat-tolerant symbiotic algae may be essential to saving elkhorn coral (Acropora palmata)鈥攁 foundational species in Caribbean reef ecosystems鈥攆rom the devastating impacts of marine heat waves and coral bleaching. The study is titled "Heat-tolerant algal symbionts may prevent extirpation of the threatened elkhorn coral, Acropora palmata, in Florida during intensifying marine heat waves."

The research, conducted by scientists at the University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine, Atmospheric, and Earth Science, in collaboration with scientists from The Shedd Aquarium, Coral Restoration Foundation, Reef Renewal, and Mote Marine Laboratory, provides timely insights into the thermal tolerance of elkhorn coral, a focal species for coral in Florida and currently listed under the Endangered Species Act.

The study, conducted in June 2022, one year before the unprecedented 2023 marine heat wave, tested 172 elkhorn sourced from restoration nurseries stretching from Miami to the lower Florida Keys.

Using custom-built rapid heat stress testing systems onboard the Shedd Aquarium's research vessel, R/V Coral Reef II, researchers tested coral fragments under a range of temperature treatments to assess their heat tolerance.

Their findings showed that elkhorn corals hosting the heat-tolerant symbiont Durusdinium could survive short-term exposure to temperatures almost 2掳C higher than those with the more common Symbiodinium.

These resilient colonies were sexually derived juvenile corals that had acquired Durusdinium in Mote Marine Laboratory's land-based facility on Summerland Key, providing evidence that manipulating symbiont communities in early life stages can be a very effective strategy for producing heat-tolerant corals for restoration.

"This study represents the most extensive thermal tolerance dataset gathered on A. palmata, revealing that, in Florida, the type of symbiotic algae, a coral host, has a greater ability to increase heat resistance than or among different coral individuals," said Richard Karp, the lead author of the study, who conducted the research while a doctoral student at the Rosenstiel School.

"By incorporating novel interventions like heat-tolerant symbionts into restoration efforts, we can boost coral resilience and help restore this iconic species."

The findings come at a critical time, as a global coral bleaching event鈥攐fficially declared in 2024鈥攈as already impacted 84% of the world's reefs. The 2023 marine heat wave wiped out many remaining wild elkhorn colonies along Florida's Coral Reef, underscoring the need for climate-resilient coral restoration strategies.

This study emphasizes the importance of scaling up symbiont-based interventions as part of current and future coral conservation and restoration work. By shifting coral-algal partnerships toward more thermally resilient symbionts, restoration practitioners may enhance the survival and long-term stability of coral populations in the face of increasing ocean temperatures.

"This is an example of Florida's reef scientists sharing their scientific and restoration expertise and their coral nurseries, ships, and laboratories to make critical discoveries," said Andrew Baker, a professor of marine biology and ecology at the Rosenstiel School and Karp's doctoral advisor.

"We need to continue to innovate and think outside the box to keep developing new approaches to help in their fight for survival against continued warming and ."

More information: Richard F. Karp et al, Heat-tolerant algal symbionts may prevent extirpation of the threatened elkhorn coral, Acropora palmata, in Florida during intensifying marine heatwaves, Coral Reefs (2025).

Journal information: Coral Reefs

Citation: Heat-tolerant algal symbionts could be key to protecting Florida's endangered elkhorn coral (2025, May 19) retrieved 22 May 2025 from /news/2025-05-tolerant-algal-symbionts-key-florida.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Shallow waters and fast currents boost elkhorn coral restoration

0 shares

Feedback to editors