Increases in seawater temperature can cause coral bleaching through loss of symbiotic algae (dinoflagellates of the family Symbiodiniaceae). Corals can recover from bleaching by recruiting algae into host cells from the residual symbiont population or from the external environment. However, the high coral mortality that often follows mass-bleaching events suggests that recovery is often limited in the wild. Here, we examine the effect of pre-exposure to heat stress on the capacity of symbiotic algae to infect cnidarian hosts using the Aiptasia (sea-anemone)-Symbiodiniaceae model system. We found that the symbiont strainBreviolumsp. CS-164 (ITS2 type B1), both free-living and in symbiosis, loses the capacity to infect the host following expo...
It is well understood that heat stress causes bleaching in corals. Much work has focused on the way ...
The success of any symbiosis under stress conditions is dependent upon the responses of both partner...
The deleterious effects of temperature-induced coral bleaching, a process by which corals lose their...
Increases in seawater temperature can cause coral bleaching through loss of symbiotic algae (dinofla...
Warming oceans menace reef ecosystems by disrupting symbiosis between cnidarians and Symbiodinium zo...
Coral bleaching is the dysfunction of the coral-algal endosymbiosis and is characterised as a loss o...
Coral bleaching—the breakdown of the cnidarian–algal symbiosis—is a major cause of reef decline. The...
SummaryThe global decline of reef-building corals is due in part to the loss of algal symbionts, or ...
The foundation of coral reef biology is the symbiosis between corals and zooxanthellae (dinoflagella...
Sensitive molecular analyses show that most corals host a complement of Symbiodinium genotypes that ...
Coral bleaching is the dysfunction of the coral-algal endosymbiosis and is characterized as a loss o...
Coral bleaching is a phenomenon caused by anthropogenically increased ocean temperatures, and may le...
Thermal stress causes the coral-dinoflagellate symbiosis to disassociate and the coral tissues to wh...
peer reviewedWhile many studies have investigated histological changes occurring in cnidarians durin...
The mutualistic relationship between corals and their unicellular dinoflagellate symbionts (Symbiodi...
It is well understood that heat stress causes bleaching in corals. Much work has focused on the way ...
The success of any symbiosis under stress conditions is dependent upon the responses of both partner...
The deleterious effects of temperature-induced coral bleaching, a process by which corals lose their...
Increases in seawater temperature can cause coral bleaching through loss of symbiotic algae (dinofla...
Warming oceans menace reef ecosystems by disrupting symbiosis between cnidarians and Symbiodinium zo...
Coral bleaching is the dysfunction of the coral-algal endosymbiosis and is characterised as a loss o...
Coral bleaching—the breakdown of the cnidarian–algal symbiosis—is a major cause of reef decline. The...
SummaryThe global decline of reef-building corals is due in part to the loss of algal symbionts, or ...
The foundation of coral reef biology is the symbiosis between corals and zooxanthellae (dinoflagella...
Sensitive molecular analyses show that most corals host a complement of Symbiodinium genotypes that ...
Coral bleaching is the dysfunction of the coral-algal endosymbiosis and is characterized as a loss o...
Coral bleaching is a phenomenon caused by anthropogenically increased ocean temperatures, and may le...
Thermal stress causes the coral-dinoflagellate symbiosis to disassociate and the coral tissues to wh...
peer reviewedWhile many studies have investigated histological changes occurring in cnidarians durin...
The mutualistic relationship between corals and their unicellular dinoflagellate symbionts (Symbiodi...
It is well understood that heat stress causes bleaching in corals. Much work has focused on the way ...
The success of any symbiosis under stress conditions is dependent upon the responses of both partner...
The deleterious effects of temperature-induced coral bleaching, a process by which corals lose their...