Probiotics for Corals Boost Resilience, Help Prevent Mortality
18 August 2021 - 5:00PM
Business Wire
A new study shows probiotics to be helpful protagonists in
boosting coral health and preventing mortality in the face of
environmental stressors, such as warming oceans and changing
climate conditions.
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KAUST Marine Scientist Dr. Raquel Peixoto
administers probiotics, or Beneficial Microorganisms for Corals
(BMC), to Pocillopora verrucosa coral in controlled aquarium
environments. (Photo: KAUST)
Published in Science Advances, the study details research
conducted by the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in
collaboration with the Red Sea Research Center at King Abdullah
University of Science and Technology (KAUST). It is the first of
its kind to show that Beneficial Microorganisms for Corals (BMC)
can protect bleached corals from death, by stimulating immune
processes that help them rebuild their microbiome environment and
offset “post-heat stress disorder” symptoms driven by thermal
stress.
The scientists created a probiotic using microbes derived from
the coral itself, selecting strains with traits deemed likeliest to
boost resilience. They isolated, plated and studied hundreds of
bacteria strains for their potential to serve as BMCs. They
inoculated two groups of corals in controlled environments—those
with probiotics and those with a placebo, exposing both to the same
degree of thermal stress. Probiotics increased the stability and
survivorship in the algae-coral host relationship by more than
40%.
Dr. Raquel Peixoto, lead author and KAUST marine scientist,
said, “Whereas all corals initially bleached and showed signs of
stress, those with BMCs survived and returned to their original
state, with results similar to corals that had not been exposed at
all. Corals without BMCs sustained damage or died. The holistic
formula equipped the corals with hearty traits for buffering and
surviving heat trauma.”
Contributing author Dr. Chris Voolstra, reef genomicist and big
data specialist, said, “The study is remarkable for demonstrating
‘genetic reprogramming,’ meaning, microbes prompt the coral to make
beneficial changes at the genetic level rather than superimpose
their functions onto the host. This is a key understanding about
the mechanisms underlying coral probiotics that was not known
before.”
The study received funding from the Great Barrier Reef
Foundation’s Out of the Blue Box Reef Innovation Challenge, for new
ideas to protect coral reefs, and was supported by the Tiffany
& Co Foundation.
Great Barrier Reef Foundation Managing Director Anna Marsden
said, “Pioneering science such as this provides hope for the future
of the Great Barrier Reef and coral reefs globally, which are
coming under increasing pressure from climate change.”
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*Source: AETOSWire
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Najdat Boukarroum Najdat.boukarroum@kaust.edu.sa