Can Corals Adapt?

For corals to survive the projected increases in seawater temperatures this century, they would need to adjust to the higher temperatures Coles SL and Brown BE. 2003. Bleaching of corals on the Great Barrier Reef: differential susceptibilities among taxa. Adv. Mar. Biol 45:183 - 223. . There are two ways that they might do this.

Firstly, corals could alter their physiology in a process known as acclimatisation. Corals found in warmer waters are more tolerant of high temperatures than corals found in cooler waters, so some changes in coral physiology seem possible. There is no evidence that corals have acclimatised to resist bleaching in the last 20 years, because many corals have bleached two or three times. If global temperatures rise in the predicted way, water temperatures Seabed Biodiversity Project in a hundred years will be much greater than those that trigger bleaching now, so corals would need to continue to acclimatise to survive.

The second process by which coral populations could adapt to new conditions is by natural selection. This would result in a gradual change in the temperature-tolerance of the population. If only the most temperature-tolerant corals survive a bleaching episode, the offspring from those corals might be on average more temperature-tolerant than the previous generation. Again, there might be limits in how high the temperature can go before corals reach the limits of adaptation. Such adaptations could only occur slowly, over several generations, with most corals having generation times of at least 5 to 10 years. Alternatively, already warm-adapted coral populations may disperse to cooler areas, thereby short-circuiting the normally lengthy process of adaptation.

Adaptation of zooxanthellae is also a possibility, with natural selection for more temperature-resistant strains of algae. Faster rates of change are possible for zooxanthellae than for the coral animal because of shorter generation times of algae. Adaptation of zooxanthellae to high temperatures has not yet been observed. Research is currently underway to investigate these different adaptation possibilities.

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