VIBRANTLY COLORFUL CORAL REVEALED AS A LAST-DITCH SURVIVAL RESPONSE
VIBRANTLY COLORFUL CORAL REVEALED AS A LAST-DITCH SURVIVAL RESPONSE
VIBRANTLY COLORFUL CORAL REVEALED AS A LAST-DITCH SURVIVAL RESPONSE
VIBRANTLY COLORFUL CORAL REVEALED AS A LAST-DITCH SURVIVAL RESPONSE
Around the world, coral reefs are threatened by the climate crisis. Typically, the dying breath of coral is signified by bleaching — an expelling of crucial algae that turns the tissue of coral a ghostly white.
However, in some cases, something spectacular happens instead: In a last-ditch effort to survive, some bleaching corals turn a bright array of neon colors. According to new research, this transformation might actually help reefs rebound.
When coral is healthy, algae live in its cells as part of a symbiotic relationship: The corals provide shelter and nutrients while the algae harness energy with photosynthetic powers. Rising temperatures cause that relationship to waver: Without algae, a stark, bleachedskeleton is left behind.
But other corals, and their symbiotic partners, react differently — turning vibrant colors from bluish-purple to dazzling pink.
For the first time, scientists have discovered why: The glow-up is actually the coral and algae adding a protective layer, like sunscreen. This likely helps them weather tough ocean conditions and may also encourage more symbiotic organisms to return to the reef.
These findings were published Thursday in the journal Current Biology.
The colorful protective layer is made up of pigments similar to green fluorescent protein — a substance found in some jellyfish, which glows when exposed to light. It works in what's called an optical feedback loop.
So while the color of coral typically exists because algae live inside the coral's cells, in this case, the coral itself makes the glowing pigment. That ability comes down to interaction with sunlight.
THE OPTICAL FEEDBACK LOOP EXPLAINED — In healthy corals, the algae's photosynthesis process absorbs most of the sunlight that hits the reef. Without algae, though, that light is free to bounce around inside the coral instead — the excess light is reflected by the white coral skeleton. All that action is stressful for algae and can dissuade the aquatic plants from returning to the reef.
But corals have found a way to make that excess light come in handy, too: It helps produce the colorful, photoprotective pigments that act as a "sunscreen layer," explains co-author Jörg Wiedenmann, a professor at the University of Southampton.
The "sunscreen" encourages algae to return, setting some normalcy into motion.
"As the recovering algal population starts taking up the light for their photosynthesis again, the light levels inside the coral will drop and the coral cells will lower the production of the colorful pigments to their normal level," Wiedenmann said in a statement.
This colorful reaction can be seen in coral reefs across the world, including the Great Barrier Reef — the world's largest coral reef.
WHAT'S BAD FOR CORALS IS BAD FOR THE OCEAN — Since coral reefs are hotbeds of biodiversity, keeping them intact is important to preserving many of the world's marine animals and plants.
Reefs contain 800 species of hard corals, and they provide resources for around 4,000 species of fish. Ultimately, corals support more species per unit area than any other ocean environment, reports the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
The authors of the new study say they're encouraged by the colorful coral bleaching because it suggests some patches of reef have a better chance of recovery. In the Great Barrier Reef, for example, a mass bleaching event rocked the reef from March to April 2020. Those corals may be able to rebound if their protective pigments work as scientists hope.
Climate change, however, continues to pose a major threat to corals across the oceans. Scientists emphasize that protecting water quality, and therefore coral reefs, is impossible without a serious commitment to reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
MMW
Comments
Post a Comment