Coral reefs have great biological and socioeconomic value, but are threatened by ocean acidification, climate change, and local human impacts. The capacity for corals to adapt or acclimatise to novel environmental conditions is unknown but fundamental to projected reef futures. The coral reefs of Kāne‘ohe Bay, Hawai‘i were devastated by anthropogenic insults from the 1930s-1970s. These reefs experience naturally reduced pH and elevated temperature relative to many other Hawaiian reefs which are not expected to face similar conditions for decades. Despite catastrophic loss in coral cover due to human disturbance, these reefs recovered under low pH and high temperature within 20 years after sewage input was diverted. We compare the pH and temperature tolerances of three dominant Hawaiian coral species from within Kāne‘ohe Bay to conspecifics from a nearby control site and show that corals from Kāne‘ohe are far more resistant to acidification and warming. These results show that corals can have different pH and temperature tolerances among habitats and understanding the mechanisms by which coral cover rebounded within two decades under projected future ocean conditions will be critical to management. Together these results indicate that reducing human stressors offers hope for reef resilience and effective conservation over coming decades.
Jury and Toonen. Proc B. Gnet
Calcification rates over 3 months for each coral examined in this study. Columns show aquarium number (Tank), target temperature treatment (LT = low temperature, MT = medium temperature, HT = high temperature), target pH treatment (HpH = high pH, MpH = medium pH, LpH = low pH), collection site (KB = Kane'ohe Bay, WB = Waimanalo Bay), species (P. acu = Pocillopora acuta, M. cap = Montipora capitata, P. com = Porites compressa), and calcification rate when normalized to initial weight (Gnet.wt in mg/g/d) or to estimated surface area (Gnet.SA in ug/cm2/d). Corals which experienced partial mortality or died were dropped from the analysis (shown as NA).
Jury and Toonen. Proc B. Survivorship
Coral survivorship after 3 months of exposure to the treatments. Columns show target temperature treatment (LT = low temperature, MT = medium temperature, HT = high temperature), target pH treatment (HpH = high pH, MpH = medium pH, LpH = low pH), collection site (KB = Kane'ohe Bay, WB = Waimanalo Bay), species (P. acu = Pocillopora acuta, M. cap = Montipora capitata, P. com = Porites compressa), and the number of corals of each treatment which fell into each of the survivorship categories (Alive = <5% tissue loss, Partial mortality = 30-90% tissue loss, Dead = no discernible live tissue).
Jury and Toonen. Proc B. pH.mean
Daily average pH values obtained from morning (pH.min) and evening (pH.max) pH measurements over the course of the experiment. Columns correspond to each aquarium in the experiment with tank number and target temperature and pH conditions as indicated.
Jury and Toonen. Proc B. pH.min
pH values obtained from morning pH measurements over the course of the experiment. Samples were collected at ~0845 hr, 15 min before the aquarium lights came on. Columns correspond to each aquarium in the experiment with tank number and target temperature and pH conditions as indicated.
Jury and Toonen. Proc B. pH.max
pH values obtained from evening pH measurements over the course of the experiment. Samples were collected at ~2045 hr, 15 min before the aquarium lights went off. Columns correspond to each aquarium in the experiment with tank number and target temperature and pH conditions as indicated.
Jury and Toonen. Proc B. pH.diel
pH values obtained from samples collected every 3 hr over the diel sampling period. Columns correspond to each aquarium in the experiment with tank number and target temperature and pH conditions as indicated.
Jury and Toonen. Proc B. TA.diel
Total alkalinity (ueq/kg) values obtained from samples taken every 6 hr during the diel sampling period. Columns correspond to each aquarium in the experiment with tank number and target temperature and pH conditions as indicated.
Jury and Toonen. Proc B. pCO2.diel
pCO2 (uatm) values calculated from samples taken every 6 hr during the diel sampling period. Columns correspond to each aquarium in the experiment with tank number and target temperature and pH conditions as indicated.
Jury and Toonen. Proc B. Omega.arag.diel
Aragonite saturation state values calculated from samples taken every 6 hr during the diel sampling period. Columns correspond to each aquarium in the experiment with tank number and target temperature and pH conditions as indicated.
Jury and Toonen. Proc B. Temp.offshore
Available offshore seawater temperature data (deg C) covering the study period.
Jury and Toonen. Proc B. Temp.KB
Available seawater temperature data (deg C) from Kane'ohe Bay covering the study period.
Jury and Toonen. Proc B. Temp.WB
Available seawater temperature data (deg C) for Waimanalo Bay covering the study period.
Jury and Toonen. Proc B. Temp.anomaly.KB
Seawater temperature anomalies in Kane'ohe Bay relative to offshore waters (deg C) covering the study period.
Jury and Toonen. Proc B. Temp.anomaly.WB
Seawater temperature anomalies in Waimanalo Bay relative to offshore waters (deg C) covering the study period.