Human-induced environmental changes have ushered in the rapid decline of coral reef ecosystems, particularly by disrupting the symbioses between reef-building corals and their photosymbionts. However, escalating stressful conditions enable some symbionts to thrive as opportunists. We present evidence that a stress-tolerant “zooxanthella” from the Indo-Pacific Ocean, Symbiodinium trenchii, has rapidly spread to coral communities across the Greater Caribbean. In marked contrast to populations from the Indo-Pacific, Atlantic populations of S. trenchii contained exceptionally low genetic diversity, including several widespread and genetically similar clones. Colonies with this symbiont tolerate temperatures 1–2 °C higher than other host–symbion...
Coral reefs are threatened by climate change as coral-algal symbioses are currently living close to ...
Scleractinian corals have demonstrated the ability to shuffle their endosymbiotic dinoflagellate com...
In the context of rising seawater temperatures associated with climate change, the issue of whether ...
Human-induced environmental changes have ushered in the rapid decline of coral reef ecosystems, part...
The mutualistic symbioses between reef-building corals and micro-algae form the basis of coral reef ...
Sensitive molecular analyses show that most corals host a complement of Symbiodinium genotypes that ...
Increased sea-surface temperatures linked to warming climate threaten coral reef ecosystems globally...
Studying the mechanisms that enable coral populations to inhabit spatially varying thermal environme...
Dynamic symbioses may critically mediate impacts of climate change on diverse organisms, with reperc...
The diversity of symbiotic ( zooxanthellae ) contained within reef-building corals was surveyed usin...
Reef-building corals are long-lived and may take many centuries to adapt, making them especially sus...
The dinoflagellate photosymbiont Symbiodinium plays a fundamental role in defining the physiological...
The symbiosis between reef-building corals and their algal endosymbionts (zooxanthellae of the genus...
Coral reefs are threatened by climate change as coral-algal symbioses are currently living close to ...
Scleractinian corals have demonstrated the ability to shuffle their endosymbiotic dinoflagellate com...
In the context of rising seawater temperatures associated with climate change, the issue of whether ...
Human-induced environmental changes have ushered in the rapid decline of coral reef ecosystems, part...
The mutualistic symbioses between reef-building corals and micro-algae form the basis of coral reef ...
Sensitive molecular analyses show that most corals host a complement of Symbiodinium genotypes that ...
Increased sea-surface temperatures linked to warming climate threaten coral reef ecosystems globally...
Studying the mechanisms that enable coral populations to inhabit spatially varying thermal environme...
Dynamic symbioses may critically mediate impacts of climate change on diverse organisms, with reperc...
The diversity of symbiotic ( zooxanthellae ) contained within reef-building corals was surveyed usin...
Reef-building corals are long-lived and may take many centuries to adapt, making them especially sus...
The dinoflagellate photosymbiont Symbiodinium plays a fundamental role in defining the physiological...
The symbiosis between reef-building corals and their algal endosymbionts (zooxanthellae of the genus...
Coral reefs are threatened by climate change as coral-algal symbioses are currently living close to ...
Scleractinian corals have demonstrated the ability to shuffle their endosymbiotic dinoflagellate com...
In the context of rising seawater temperatures associated with climate change, the issue of whether ...