Washington: A nutrient-rich, balanced diet is beneficial to corals during stressful thermal events, a new study has found.
The research led by scientists at the University of Miami (UM) Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science and the Centre Scientifique de Monaco concluded that the particular nutrient balance in seawater is what matters most.
To test which nutrients were more beneficial to corals during elevated temperature conditions, the scientists fed them two types - inorganic nutrients of nitrogen and phosphorus commonly found in the ocean as a result of fertilisers and sewage runoff, and organic nutrients of zooplankton, tiny animals in the ocean that coral are known to feed on.
The research team placed specimens of the yellow scroll coral, Turbinaria reniformis, collected from the Red Sea in separate seawater tanks with varying temperature and nutrients.
The corals were subjected to two different inorganic nutrient enrichment scenarios - increased nitrogen only or increased nitrogen and phosphorus at varying temperatures - 25 degrees Celsius to represent normal temperature conditions and 30 degrees Celsius to represent thermal stress conditions.
Some of the corals also received organic nutrient enrichment of tiny ocean animals called zooplankton during the laboratory experiment.
All of the corals were then returned to normal temperature conditions to examine their recovery.
"We found that the coral's resilience to thermal stress totally depends on the kind of inorganic enrichment - if it's 'balanced' or not," said Erica Towle, an alumna of the UM Rosenstiel School.
The researchers found that excess nitrogen alone and zooplankton made high-temperature bleaching events worse. While excess nitrogen in combination with extra phosphorus and zooplankton afford the coral resilience to bleaching.
This study is one of the first to assess the three-way interaction between the two types of nutrient enrichment and thermal stress on coral health.
The UM Rosenstiel School research team published a previous study this year that showed the critically endangered Staghorn coral may benefit from supplemental nutrition to mitigate the adverse impacts of global climate change.
The results showed that temperature, CO2 and feeding each had significant effects on the coral's growth rate.
That study was the first to document that an endangered coral species, which was once found widely throughout South Florida and the Caribbean, can buffer the effects of increased CO2 in the ocean by increasing feeding rates.
"Excess nutrients from land sources and thermal stress will likely occur in concert in the future so it's important to assess them together," said Towle.
"Incorporating nutrient levels in thermal bleaching models will likely be very important for coral reef managers in the future as ocean waters warm," Towle said.
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