Coral Reefs: 1998
Publications
Author:
Kushmaro, A., Rosenberg, E., Fine, M., Ben-Haim, Y., and
Loya, Y.
Title: Effect of temperature on bleaching of the
coral Oculina patagonica by Vibrio AK-1.
Publication: Marine Ecology Progress
Series 171: 131-137, 1998.
© Inter-Research
Notes: Laboratory
aquaria experiments demonstrated that Vibrio AK-1 caused
rapid and extensive bleaching of Oculina patagonica at 29
degrees C, slower and less complete bleaching at 25 degrees C and
20 degrees C, and no bleaching at 16 degrees C. The effects of
temperature on the bacteria-induced bleaching experiments in
aquaria were consistent with the natural bleaching of O.
patagonica in the Mediterranean Sea. In situ bleaching
increased rapidly from late May to September, following the rise
of surface seawater temperature, which reaches 29 degrees C in
August. During the winter, when the seawater temperature drops to
16 degrees C, most of the bleached coral colonies recovered.
Vibrio AK-1 was isolated from all bleached corals examined
in the summer, but could not be isolated from healthy (unbleached)
corals in the summer or from bleached and unbleached corals in the
winter. The mechanism by which increased temperature causes the
coral breaching by Vibrio AK-1 is at present not clear. The
bacteria grow in the laboratory relatively rapidly at 16 degrees C
(doubling time 2 h), indicating that bacterial growth is probably
not the critical factor. We suggest that temperature-regulated
factors affecting bacterial virulence may play a role in the
bleaching process.
|