Geochemistry is a science in which we collect samples of
natural things – rocks, shells, feathers, bits of wood, teeth – and then
measure some aspect of their chemical makeup to learn something about the
world. Geochemistry can be used to learn about the organisms whose parts are
being analyzed; for instance to figure out what they ate (the old adage “you
are what you eat” is true here—many times a distinct chemical signature comes
with eating certain food items). It can also be used to learn something about
the environment in which an organism lived or a rock formed.
Requisite beautiful-coral-reef shot. Kiritimati Island |
Corals are, by geochemistry-practitioner standards, awesome.
For one thing, corals make their skeletons out of chemicals in seawater—as the
water chemistry changes, so does the chemistry of the skeleton. Second, corals
grow larger over time by adding new layers onto their skeletons, while the old
skeleton often just sits there as a semi-permanent record of conditions at the
time that bit of skeleton formed. This is like keeping track of daily weather
on slips of paper added to a pile—you can then dig back through the pile to see
how things have changed over time.
Third, corals also have a built-in time-stamp on these
records: the density of the skeleton fluctuates with the seasons, leaving bands
that can be seen by x-ray or CT scan in samples (see my earlier post).
For coral samples collected live, these bands can be counted back in time;
corals that are dead can be dated using another aspect of geochemistry: the
amount of a particular radioactive element that decays at a known rate can be
measured to back-calculate how long ago that coral was alive.
The fourth excellent/horrible thing about corals is this:
while they sometimes act as passive recorders of water chemistry, both the
density and the chemistry of the skeleton can also be affected by other things
– notably how happy the coral is (corals that are heat-stressed “bleach” by
expelling their colorful symbiotic algae, which screws with skeletal growth and
chemical incorporation). Other aspects of coral biology such as spawning or
food intake also can change the chemical signature.
If all of the different influences on the coral skeletal
chemistry can be disentangled, there is fantastic potential for long
reconstructions of both the environmental conditions in which the coral grew
and the coral’s reactions to those conditions (over the last few100s of years,
or even longer if dead corals are also used).
But that’s the hard part: disentangling. For one reason, we
keep thinking that we know what controls each chemical signature (and this is
the “royal we,” including me and other scientists), and then we figure out that
it’s more complicated: we thought the concentration of strontium was a direct,
unbiased measure of water temperature; now it seems that this is also very
slightly affected by the skeletal growth rate. We also thought that the ratio
of two different isotopes of oxygen in the skeleton was only controlled by
water temperature and salinity (isotopes are different forms of the same
element that behave the same chemically but have very slightly different
weights), but then we figured out that calcification rate also matters.
Not totally happy coral |
And here’s where our work comes in: faced with weird oxygen
isotope data that couldn’t physically be explained by any combination of water
temperature, salinity, or calcification, we knew there must another
as-yet-unidentified impact at play. What we saw was a big jump in the baseline
of the data after a major coral bleaching event.
Now, a quick tangent: coral bleaching is an extremely
worrying phenomenon. Corals get most of their nutrition from the symbiotic
algae they house in their tissues; when bleached, they can starve to death or
become more susceptible to disease. With global water temperatures increasing,
coral bleaching is becoming more frequent. The big question in the survival of
coral reefs as we know them is therefore: can corals adapt?
One way corals might be able to adapt to warmer waters is by
kicking out “weak” forms of symbiotic algae and trading them for genetic
strains that are more resistant to heat stress. This is called the “adaptivebleaching hypothesis”—the idea
being that by acquiring more heat-tolerant symbionts, corals can survive the
onslaught of climate change (at least for a while).
Our data might be a reflection of this very phenomenon.
If the symbionts the corals housed before the bleaching event were
physiologically different than those after, maybe the skeletal chemistry would
be different.
There has been a lot of activity lately from scientists trying to
understand the nitty-gritty workings of coral calcification. We were able to
synthesize this work and put forward a potential mechanism that could cause our
observations (based mostly on a change in pH at the calcification site).
We also tried to test the idea directly by collecting lots
of little nubbins (possibly the best technical term ever) of live coral. We
identified their symbionts using DNA methods (and here “we” means my colleague
Melissa Garren), and then the corresponding oxygen isotope values. What we
found was a hint of a relationship—so we didn’t disprove our hypothesis.
Our "nubbins" were essentially mini-core samples from large corals |
This area of research still needs more work, but it is
exciting; if this signature is real, it could be used to retrospectively test
for adaptive bleaching in other corals during other bleaching events. This is
important to predict the outcome of bleaching events and manage coral reefs as we face increased heat stress. If corals can adaptively change symbionts, can we help them do this?
Can we more effectively manage outplanting and reseeding efforts to restock
damaged reefs?
I hope that this paper stimulates new ideas and more
projects to help answer these questions.
Awesome explanation Jessica! I know you feel like it took a while to get that data out, but it seems like it was worth the wait!
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