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Influence of temperature changes on symbiotic Symbiodiniaceae and bacterial communities’ structure: an experimental study on soft coral <i>Sarcophyton trocheliophorum</i> (Anthozoa: Alcyoniidae)

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Hao Lu, Weidong Li, Wenxue Che, Alireza Asem, Pei-Zheng Wang Weidong Li, Weidong Li, Wenxue Che, Pei-Zheng Wang

Summary

This study examined how temperature changes affect symbiotic algae and bacterial communities in the soft coral Sarcophyton trocheliophorum. Researchers found that temperature stress altered the composition and diversity of both microbial symbiont groups.

Abstract It is well concluded that microbial composition and diversity of coral species can be affected under temperature alterations. However, the interaction of environmental accumulation of corals and temperature stress on symbiotic Symbiodiniaceae and bacterial communities are rarely studied. In this study, two groups of soft coral Sarcophyton trocheliophorum were cultured under constant (26 °C) and inconstant (22 °C to 26 °C) temperature conditions for 30 days as control treatments. After that, water was cooled rapidly to decrease to 20 °C in 24 h. The results of diversity analysis showed that symbiotic Symbiodiniaceae and bacterial communities had a significant difference between the two accumulated groups. The principal coordinate analyses confirmed that symbiotic Symbiodiniaceae and bacterial communities of both control treatments were clustered into two groups. Our results evidenced that rapid cooling stress could not change symbiotic Symbiodiniaceae and bacterial communities’ composition. On the other hand, cooling stress could alter only bacterial communities in constant group. In conclusion, our study represents a clear relationship between environmental accumulation and the impact of short-term cooling stress in which microbial composition structure can be affected by early adaptation conditions.

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