Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Latitudinal variation in thermal tolerance brea...

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Latitudinal variation in thermal tolerance breadth of early life stages of corals

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Latitudinal variation in thermal tolerance breadth of early life stages of corals. / Woolsey, Erika; Keith, Sal; Byrne, Maria et al.
In: Coral Reefs, Vol. 34, No. 2, 06.2015, p. 471-478.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Woolsey, E, Keith, S, Byrne, M, Schmidt-Roach, S & Baird, A 2015, 'Latitudinal variation in thermal tolerance breadth of early life stages of corals', Coral Reefs, vol. 34, no. 2, pp. 471-478. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00338-014-1253-z

APA

Woolsey, E., Keith, S., Byrne, M., Schmidt-Roach, S., & Baird, A. (2015). Latitudinal variation in thermal tolerance breadth of early life stages of corals. Coral Reefs, 34(2), 471-478. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00338-014-1253-z

Vancouver

Woolsey E, Keith S, Byrne M, Schmidt-Roach S, Baird A. Latitudinal variation in thermal tolerance breadth of early life stages of corals. Coral Reefs. 2015 Jun;34(2):471-478. Epub 2014 Dec 23. doi: 10.1007/s00338-014-1253-z

Author

Woolsey, Erika ; Keith, Sal ; Byrne, Maria et al. / Latitudinal variation in thermal tolerance breadth of early life stages of corals. In: Coral Reefs. 2015 ; Vol. 34, No. 2. pp. 471-478.

Bibtex

@article{baba0796303f4ed6b9eebd87b2e7cd22,
title = "Latitudinal variation in thermal tolerance breadth of early life stages of corals",
abstract = "Organisms living in habitats characterized by a marked seasonal temperature variation often have a greater thermal tolerance than those living in more stable habitats. To determine the extent to which this hypothesis applies to reef corals, we compared thermal tolerance of the early life stages of five scleractinian species from three locations spanning 17° of latitude along the east coast of Australia. Embryos were exposed to an 8 °C temperature range around the local ambient temperature at the time of spawning. Upper thermal thresholds, defined as the temperature treatment at which the proportion of abnormal embryos or median life span was significantly different to ambient controls, varied predictably among locations. At Lizard Island, the northern-most site with the least annual variation in temperature, the proportion of abnormal embryos increased and life span decreased 2 °C above ambient in the two species tested. At two southern sites, One Tree Island and Lord Howe Island, where annual temperature variation was greater, upper temperature thresholds were generally 4 °C or greater above ambient for both variables in the four species tested. The absolute upper thermal threshold temperature also varied among locations: 30 °C at Lizard Island; 28 °C at One Tree Island; 26 °C at Lord Howe Island. These results support previous work on adult corals demonstrating predictable differences in upper thermal thresholds with latitude. With projected ocean warming, these temperature thresholds will be exceeded in northern locations in the near future, adding to a growing body of evidence indicating that climate change is likely to be more detrimental to low latitude than high latitude corals .",
keywords = "Coral reefs, Larval ecology, Biogeography , Dispersal ",
author = "Erika Woolsey and Sal Keith and Maria Byrne and S. Schmidt-Roach and Andrew Baird",
year = "2015",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1007/s00338-014-1253-z",
language = "English",
volume = "34",
pages = "471--478",
journal = "Coral Reefs",
issn = "0722-4028",
publisher = "Springer-Verlag",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Latitudinal variation in thermal tolerance breadth of early life stages of corals

AU - Woolsey, Erika

AU - Keith, Sal

AU - Byrne, Maria

AU - Schmidt-Roach, S.

AU - Baird, Andrew

PY - 2015/6

Y1 - 2015/6

N2 - Organisms living in habitats characterized by a marked seasonal temperature variation often have a greater thermal tolerance than those living in more stable habitats. To determine the extent to which this hypothesis applies to reef corals, we compared thermal tolerance of the early life stages of five scleractinian species from three locations spanning 17° of latitude along the east coast of Australia. Embryos were exposed to an 8 °C temperature range around the local ambient temperature at the time of spawning. Upper thermal thresholds, defined as the temperature treatment at which the proportion of abnormal embryos or median life span was significantly different to ambient controls, varied predictably among locations. At Lizard Island, the northern-most site with the least annual variation in temperature, the proportion of abnormal embryos increased and life span decreased 2 °C above ambient in the two species tested. At two southern sites, One Tree Island and Lord Howe Island, where annual temperature variation was greater, upper temperature thresholds were generally 4 °C or greater above ambient for both variables in the four species tested. The absolute upper thermal threshold temperature also varied among locations: 30 °C at Lizard Island; 28 °C at One Tree Island; 26 °C at Lord Howe Island. These results support previous work on adult corals demonstrating predictable differences in upper thermal thresholds with latitude. With projected ocean warming, these temperature thresholds will be exceeded in northern locations in the near future, adding to a growing body of evidence indicating that climate change is likely to be more detrimental to low latitude than high latitude corals .

AB - Organisms living in habitats characterized by a marked seasonal temperature variation often have a greater thermal tolerance than those living in more stable habitats. To determine the extent to which this hypothesis applies to reef corals, we compared thermal tolerance of the early life stages of five scleractinian species from three locations spanning 17° of latitude along the east coast of Australia. Embryos were exposed to an 8 °C temperature range around the local ambient temperature at the time of spawning. Upper thermal thresholds, defined as the temperature treatment at which the proportion of abnormal embryos or median life span was significantly different to ambient controls, varied predictably among locations. At Lizard Island, the northern-most site with the least annual variation in temperature, the proportion of abnormal embryos increased and life span decreased 2 °C above ambient in the two species tested. At two southern sites, One Tree Island and Lord Howe Island, where annual temperature variation was greater, upper temperature thresholds were generally 4 °C or greater above ambient for both variables in the four species tested. The absolute upper thermal threshold temperature also varied among locations: 30 °C at Lizard Island; 28 °C at One Tree Island; 26 °C at Lord Howe Island. These results support previous work on adult corals demonstrating predictable differences in upper thermal thresholds with latitude. With projected ocean warming, these temperature thresholds will be exceeded in northern locations in the near future, adding to a growing body of evidence indicating that climate change is likely to be more detrimental to low latitude than high latitude corals .

KW - Coral reefs

KW - Larval ecology

KW - Biogeography

KW - Dispersal

U2 - 10.1007/s00338-014-1253-z

DO - 10.1007/s00338-014-1253-z

M3 - Journal article

VL - 34

SP - 471

EP - 478

JO - Coral Reefs

JF - Coral Reefs

SN - 0722-4028

IS - 2

ER -