Journal article
A role for bacterial experimental evolution in coral bleaching mitigation?
J Maire, MJH van Oppen
Trends in Microbiology | CELL PRESS | Published : 2022
Abstract
Coral reefs are rapidly declining because of widespread mass coral bleaching causing extensive coral mortality. Elevated seawater temperatures are the main drivers of coral bleaching, and climate change is increasing the frequency and severity of destructive marine heatwaves. Efforts to enhance coral thermal bleaching tolerance can be targeted at the coral host or at coral-associated microorganisms (e.g., dinoflagellate endosymbionts and bacteria). The literature on experimental evolution of bacteria suggests that it has value as a tool to increase coral climate resilience. We provide a workflow on how to experimentally evolve coral-associated bacteria to confer thermal tolerance to coral ho..
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Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the Australian Research Council Laureate Fellowship FL180100036 to M.J.H.v.O.