Diversity and dynamics of multiple symbionts contribute to early development of broadcast spawning reef-building coral Dipsastraea veroni
Minglan Guo, Lei Jiang, Guowei Zhou, Jiansheng Lian, Xiaolei Yu, Hui Huang

TL;DR
This study explores how symbiotic relationships with algae, bacteria, and archaea help a type of coral survive and develop during its early life stages.
Contribution
The study reveals that symbiosis with multiple organisms is a heritable and adaptive process in Dipsastraea veroni coral during early development.
Findings
Symbiosis with Symbiodiniaceae, bacteria, and archaea is crucial for early development in Dipsastraea veroni.
The coral shows dynamic shifts in dominant symbionts at different developmental stages.
Flexible symbiotic mechanisms support coral survival and evolution under environmental changes.
Abstract
Sexual reproduction and recruitment enhance the genetic diversity and evolution of reef-building corals for population recovery and coral reef conservation under climate change. However, new recruits are vulnerable to physical changes and the mechanisms of symbiosis establishment remain poorly understood. Here, Dipsastraea veroni, a broadcast spawning hermaphrodite reef-building coral, was subjected to settlement and juvenile growth in flow-through in situ seawater at 27.93 ± 0.96°C. Symbiosis of Symbiodiniaceae, bacteria, and/or archaea by horizontal acquisition and/or hypothetical vertical transmission through the mucus with symbionts from the parent appears to be a heritable process of selection and adaptation in D. veroni at the egg, larva, juvenile (5 days post settlement, d p.s. and 32 d p.s.) stages. Symbiodiniaceae was dominated by the genera Cladocopium, Durusdinium,…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsCoral and Marine Ecosystems Studies · Marine and coastal plant biology · Coastal wetland ecosystem dynamics
