PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Surprising discovery about coral’s resilience could help reefs survive climate change

USC Dornsife researchers studying a common Caribbean coral’s ability to adapt to rising temperatures turn up an unexpected result

Surprising discovery about coral’s resilience could help reefs survive climate change
2023-10-17
(Press-News.org)

The factors affecting coral’s resilience — its ability to adapt to and survive environmental changes — seem to be more nuanced than scientists believed.

In a study published Oct. 18 in the journal Global Change Biology, researchers reveal surprising findings about a species common to Caribbean waters. The discovery may help improve efforts to save corals from bleaching and other consequences of climate change.

A team led by Assistant Professor of Biological Sciences Carly Kenkel at the USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences studied the mountainous star coral, Orbicella faveolata, to determine whether coral populations that have survived higher temperatures can pass their heat tolerance on to their offspring. 

To the scientists’ surprise, the results showed the opposite: The offspring from a population that is less heat-tolerant performed better when exposed to high temperatures than their counterparts from a heat-tolerant population.

The findings counter the commonly held notion among scientists that if coral parents can handle the heat, so should their offspring. 

Climate change threatens the survival of coral reefs globally. Rising ocean temperatures have led to coral bleaching, which weakens the coral, leaving them more susceptible to disease. 

“The study findings have significant implications for how we think about saving coral reefs,” said Kenkel, who holds the Wilford and Daris Zinsmeyer Early Career Chair in Marine Studies at USC Dornsife. “It’s not as simple as just breeding more heat-tolerant corals.”

To assess which corals could more readily handle higher temperatures, the scientists collected coral reproductive cells, known as gametes, from two different coral reef sites in the Florida Keys. One site sits close to the shore and the other farther out to sea. 

The researchers carefully bred the corals in a controlled environment and exposed the coral larvae to heat stress conditions in the lab. The researchers then measured how the corals survived. They also examined the activity of the coral genes to see whether they could detect signs of stress at higher temperatures.

The unexpected finding that coral larvae from the less heat-tolerant population survived better and showed fewer signs of stress suggests that the ability of coral offspring to handle heat might be influenced by various factors, including whether and how often their parents have bleached in the past or suffered other environmental pressures.

The researchers acknowledge that more research is needed to confirm their findings. The study focuses on one specific coral species, and different species may behave differently. Also, the research took place in a controlled lab setting, and many factors beyond temperature affect coral reefs in the wild.

The scientists hope to dig deeper into how corals adapt to environmental changes and pass on resilience, examining the impact of corals’ history and relationships with other organisms as well as the overall health of the reef. 

Kenkel, who also conducts research as part of USC Dornsife’s Wrigley Institute for Environment and Sustainability, said coral rescue may require a more comprehensive approach. 

“Instead of focusing solely on breeding more heat-tolerant corals,” she said, “we might need to consider other factors affecting coral survival and more diverse interventions.” This includes their genetic diversity and external stressors affecting their overall well-being.

By unlocking the secrets of corals’ ability to withstand rising temperatures, scientists might find new ways to help these essential ecosystems thrive in a changing world.

First author on the study Yingqi Zhang contributed to the research while a PhD student in Kenkel’s USC Dornsife lab. Now at the University of Utah, she sees the work as an important step toward saving reefs.

“We believe that this study opens up promising avenues for future research, which is critical to the success of reef management and restoration practices for this charismatic Caribbean coral species,” she said.

About the study

In addition to Kenkel and Zhang, authors on the study include Shelby Gantt, Elise Keister and Dustin Kemp of  University of Alabama at Birmingham; Holland Elder, formerly at USC Dornsife and now at The Australian Institute of Marine Science; Graham Kolodziej, Catalina Aguilar, Michael Studivan of the University of Miami and the National Oceanic and Atomospheric Administration (NOAA) Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory (AOML); Derek Manzello at NOAA’s Center for Weather and Climate Prediction; and Ian Enochs of the NOAA AOML.  

The study was supported in part by NOAA funds.

END


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Surprising discovery about coral’s resilience could help reefs survive climate change Surprising discovery about coral’s resilience could help reefs survive climate change 2

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Ushering in the era of light-powered 'multi-level memories'

Ushering in the era of light-powered multi-level memories
2023-10-17
We live in an era of data deluge. The data centers that are operated to store and process this flood of data use a lot of electricity, which has been called a major contributor to environmental pollution. To overcome this situation, polygonal computing systems with lower power consumption and higher computation speed are being researched, but they are not able to handle the huge demand for data processing because they operate with electrical signals, just like conventional binary computing systems. The Korea Institute of Science ...

Staggering increase in opioid-related deaths among people experiencing homelessness, new study finds

2023-10-17
London, ON, October 17, 2023 – People experiencing homelessness accounted for an increasing proportion of fatal opioid-related deaths in Ontario, Canada, reaching one in six such deaths by 2021, according to new research from ICES, Western University and Lawson Health Research Institute. In one of the first reports to track the continuous increase in opioid-related mortality in the province among people experiencing homelessness, researchers found that the quarterly proportion of opioid-related overdose ...

Subalpine forests in the Northern Rockies are fire resilient—for now

2023-10-17
Over 4,800 years in the Northern Rockies during wet periods and dry periods, subalpine forests consistently recovered from wildfires, growing back vegetation and leaving evidence of their resilience in lake sediment cores.  Kyra Clark-Wolf, now a CU Boulder postdoc with the North Central Climate Adaptation Center (NC CASC), led the study as part of her dissertation research. NC CASC is a partnership of CU Boulder and the United States Geological Survey. “I thought we might see different ecosystem responses to past fires between wet and dry periods,” said Clark-Wolf. “But ...

Unique marimo threatened by rising lake temperatures

Unique marimo threatened by rising lake temperatures
2023-10-17
Rising lake water temperatures threaten the survival of marimo, unique algal balls found only in cold lakes. Kobe University researchers clarified that the warmer it gets, the more the inward decomposition outpaces the outward growth of these life forms, making them increasingly fragile. Moss balls, or “marimo” in Japanese, are popular pet water plants that are not a moss but a special growth form of filamentous algae. They are found naturally in lakes in northern Japan and cold lakes of ...

How to scientifically, efficiently, and cost-effectively treat the wastewater generated from anaerobic digestion?

How to scientifically, efficiently, and cost-effectively treat the wastewater generated from anaerobic digestion?
2023-10-17
The resource utilization of waste is an important means to implement the construction of ecological civilization. Agricultural waste contains rich renewable resources and has high potential value in fertilization and energy conversion. Anaerobic digestion technology is a promising technology for treating agricultural waste. Anaerobic digestion refers to the digestion technology in which organic matter is decomposed into CH4, CO2, H2O and H2S by facultative bacteria and anaerobic bacteria under anaerobic conditions, which can transform solid organic matter into soluble organic matter. Not only does it have the advantages of stable process and low operation cost, the biogas produced can also ...

Novel hydrogel finds new aptamers, or ‘chemical antibodies,’ in days

Novel hydrogel finds new aptamers, or ‘chemical antibodies,’ in days
2023-10-17
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — One double-helix strand of DNA could extend six feet, but it is so tightly coiled that it packs an entire sequence of nucleotides into the tiny nucleus of a cell. If that same DNA was instead split into two strands and divided into many, many short pieces, it would become trillions of uniquely folded 3D molecular structures, capable of bonding to and possibly manipulating specifically shaped molecules — if they’re the perfect fit. These short, single-stranded segments of DNA or RNA are called aptamers, also known as “chemical antibodies.” According to Penn State researchers, ...

Virtual reality helps people with hoarding disorder practice decluttering

2023-10-17
Many people who dream of an organized, uncluttered home à la Marie Kondo find it hard to decide what to keep and what to let go. But for those with hoarding disorder — a mental condition estimated to affect 2.5% of the U.S. population — the reluctance to let go can reach dangerous and debilitating levels. Now, a pilot study by Stanford Medicine researchers suggests that a virtual reality therapy that allows those with hoarding disorder to rehearse relinquishing possessions in a simulation of their own home could help them declutter ...

Fluctuating blood pressure: a warning sign for dementia and heart disease

2023-10-17
A new study by Australian researchers has shown that fluctuating blood pressure can increase the risk of dementia and vascular problems in older people. Short blood pressure (BP) fluctuations within 24 hours as well as over several days or weeks are linked with impaired cognition, say University of South Australia (UniSA) researchers who led the study. Higher systolic BP variations (the top number that measures the pressure in arteries when a heart beats) are also linked with stiffening of the arteries, associated with heart disease. The findings have been published in the journal Cerebral Circulation – Cognition and ...

Significant gaps in UK public awareness of tell-tale cancer signs in kids and teens

2023-10-17
There are significant gaps in the UK public’s awareness of the tell-tale signs and symptoms of cancer in children and teens, with just a third of adults expressing confidence in being able to recognise them, find the results of a nationally representative survey published online in the journal Archives of Disease in Childhood. Public awareness of the cancer signs and symptoms in this age group is much lower than it is in adults, suggesting the need for initiatives to plug this knowledge gap, say the researchers. Childhood cancer is the leading cause of ...

ChatGPT may be better than doctors at evidence-based management of clinical depression

2023-10-17
ChatGPT, the AI language model capable of mirroring human conversation, may be better than a doctor at following recognised treatment standards for clinical depression, and without any of the gender or social class biases sometimes seen in the primary care doctor-patient relationship, finds research published in the open access journal Family Medicine and Community Health. However, further research is needed into how well this technology might manage severe cases as well as potential risks and ethical issues arising from its use, say the researchers. Depression is very common, and many of those affected turn first to ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

1.5°C Paris Climate Agreement target too high for polar ice sheets and sea level rise

Scientists discover potential new targets for Alzheimer’s drugs

Scientists develop new treatment with potential to tackle commonest form of childhood cancer

Technique rapidly measures cells’ density, reflecting health and developmental state

Mask users can now breathe easy on two counts

Aging reduces CAR-T cell effectiveness by impairing metabolism, study shows

Why are patients with mitochondrial disease more susceptible to infections? New JAX study finds the answer

National Heart Centre Singapore implements cutting-edge artificial intelligence in nationwide project for rapid coronary artery disease prediction

How molecules can ‘remember’ and contribute to memory and learning

New research links global climate patterns to wildfires in Los Angeles

The RESIL-Card project is piloting its resilience assessment tool across Europe.

Researchers identify molecular brake that regulates synaptic maturation

Study links residual inflammation in psoriasis patients to obesity and fatty liver disease

Vaping increases dependency more than nicotine gum

New scientific articles highlight potential link between microplastics in ultra-processed foods and brain health

New study reveals how 5'LysTTT tRNA fragments protect neurons during botulinum toxin exposure

Prader-Willi syndrome reveals unique link between genetics and psychiatric disorders

Dynamic memory engrams reveal how the brain forms, stores, and updates memories

Researchers decode neural pathways of cognitive flexibility across species

Research team traces evolutionary history of bacterial circadian clock on ancient Earth

Majority of youth overdose deaths from 2018 to 2022 were driven by fentanyl alone

Reducing wait times for hip and knee replacement surgeries

Clinician entrepreneurs can benefit Canada’s health and economy

Scientists discover NELL2’s dual role: boosting bone formation while curbing fat accumulation

Bees facing new threats, putting our survival and theirs at risk

Deep learning can predict lung cancer risk from single LDCT scan

Genomic data shows widespread mpox transmission in West Africa prior to 2022 global outbreak

Research spotlight: Gender differences in primary care physician earnings and outcomes

Eating craved foods with meals lessens cravings, boosts weight loss

Limited evidence suggests calorie restriction may slightly reduce depressive symptoms in people with elevated cardiometabolic risk

[Press-News.org] Surprising discovery about coral’s resilience could help reefs survive climate change
USC Dornsife researchers studying a common Caribbean coral’s ability to adapt to rising temperatures turn up an unexpected result