https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/marine-science/articles/10.3389/fmars.2024.1333806/abstract

*Authors*
Sophia L. Ellis, Peter Butcherine, Alejandro Tagliafico, Conor A.
Hendrickson, Brendan P. Kelaher, Kai G. Schulz, Daniel P. Harrison

*31 July 2024*

doi: 10.3389/fmars.2024.1333806

*Authors*
Light is critical to coral growth through endosymbiont photosynthesis but
can also act with elevated temperatures to cause coral bleaching. When more
light is absorbed than can be used for photosynthesis, elevated irradiance
can damage symbiont photosynthetic machinery.Hence, solar-radiation
management through shading has been suggested to alleviate coral bleaching
during marine heatwaves. Acropora divaricata and Acropora kenti were tested
at two temperatures with 30% shading and an unshaded control to determine
the relative impacts of light and temperature on coral bleaching severity.
The coral bleaching response was assessed by photochemical (pulse amplitude
modulated fluorometry), physiological (symbiont density, chlorophyll a
concentration, catalase activity, and lipid peroxidation), and physical
(mean intensity of grey or 'percentage whiteness') markers. Shading
significantly reduced the bleaching response in A. divaricata, whilst for
some parameters A. kenti responded negatively to shade. In A. divaricata,
shading prevented photochemical collapse up to the experiment's maximum 4.4
degree-heating weeks (DHW). Biomarkers of coral bleaching stress responded
to shade and water temperature at 4.4 DHW; catalase activity was greatest
in the shaded and ambient temperature treatment. Shading did not reduce the
effects of bleaching in A. kenti; the mean intensity of grey and light
saturation coefficient was greatest in the shaded treatment. Shading did,
however, reduce lipid peroxidation at 3 DHW.Our results suggest shading
during thermal stress may only protect some coral species, highlighting the
need to consider species-specific responses when evaluating the potential
efficacy of coral bleaching interventions.

*Source: Frontiers *

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