Coral's Addiction Threatens Great Barrier
Reef And Human Food Supply
March 24, 2008
Coral's Addiction to 'Junk Food'
Over two hundred million humans depend for their
subsistence on the fact that coral has an addiction to ‘junk food’ - and
orders its partners, the symbiotic algae, to make it.
This curious arrangement is one of Nature’s most delicate
and complex partnerships – a collaboration now facing grave threats from
climate change.
The symbiosis between coral – a primitive animal – and
zooxanthellae, tiny one-celled plants, is not only powerful enough to
build the largest living organism on the planet, the Great Barrier Reef
but also underpins the economies and living standards of many tropical
nations and societies who harvest their food from the reefs or have
developing tourism industries.
The issue of whether the partnership is robust enough to
withstand the challenges of climate change is driving a worldwide
scientific effort to decipher how corals and their symbiotic algae
communicate with one another, says Professor David Yellowlees of the ARC
Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies (CoECRS) and James Cook
University.
“It’s an incredibly intricate relationship in which the
corals feed the algae and try to control their diet, and the algae in turn
use sunlight to produce “junk food” – carbohydrates and fats – for the
corals to consume.
“Where it all breaks down is when heated water lingers
over the reef and the corals expel the algae and then begin to slowly
starve to death. This is the bleaching phenomenon Australians are by
now so familiar with, and which is such a feature of global
warming.”
The challenge for scientists is to understand the
‘chemical conversation’ that goes on between the corals and zooxanthellae,
the genes which control it – and to explore whether corals which lose
their primary partners can survive using other algae or must inevitably
die.
Prof Yellowlees and Dr Bill Leggat will shortly release a
new review of the current state of knowledge about the metabolism of the
coral symbiosis in the journal Plant Cell and
Environment.
“Coral symbiosis takes place mainly in clear, clean
nutrient-poor waters where food is so scarce the corals need a partner to
help feed them.
“We know for example the corals provide
carbon as CO2 which is processed by the algae to reprocess into
carbohydrates and fats using energy from sunlight, so they can feed. It’s
a beautiful recycling process.
“The corals control the diet of the algae, to ensure it
produces what they need. You could say they farm the algae, much as we
farm crops.
“And the algae serve as the junk food chefs, providing the
corals favourite food to order.”
“Researchers in the Centre of Excellence are trying to
understand the chemical and genetic basis for the conversation that goes
on between a coral and its particular algae, and to establish whether, if
it loses its algae in a bleaching event, it can establish the same
relationship with a different strain of algae.
“In other words, how robust this symbiotic system is and
whether it can withstand shocks from warming, ocean acidification, changes
in sunlight levels and other likely impacts from human
activity.
“The bottom line here is the survival of the Great Barrier
Reef and coral reefs the world over.”
Five times in the Earth’s history corals have been wiped
out, or very close to it, suggesting they are highly vulnerable to changes
in ocean conditions, Prof. Yellowlees says. Some of these past events were
probably triggered by past global warming and ocean
acidification.
Some scientists have speculated whether corals in crisis
can be given a helping hand by humans in the form of new symbiotic algae
reared for the purpose – but these are very hard to grow outside of their
coral hosts, and Prof Yellowlees is doubtful this is a practical solution
to major bleaching events affecting thousands of square kilometres of
reef.
More likely, he feels, is that cryptic strains of algae
which currently play little role in the symbiosis but are present in
corals may be able to take over the role of junk food chef and keep the
corals going on their preferred diet. To what extent this can happen is
not yet known.