The effect of allometric scaling in coral thermal microenvironments.

A long-standing interest in marine science is in the degree to which environmental conditions of flow and irradiance, combined with optical, thermal and morphological characteristics of individual coral colonies, affects their sensitivity of thermal microenvironments and susceptibility to stress-ind...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Robert H Ong, Andrew J C King, Jaap A Kaandorp, Benjamin J Mullins, M Julian Caley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5638381?pdf=render
id doaj-4785e61c799244748f49afe8dc3ba43f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-4785e61c799244748f49afe8dc3ba43f2020-11-25T02:10:30ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-011210e018421410.1371/journal.pone.0184214The effect of allometric scaling in coral thermal microenvironments.Robert H OngAndrew J C KingJaap A KaandorpBenjamin J MullinsM Julian CaleyA long-standing interest in marine science is in the degree to which environmental conditions of flow and irradiance, combined with optical, thermal and morphological characteristics of individual coral colonies, affects their sensitivity of thermal microenvironments and susceptibility to stress-induced bleaching within and/or among colonies. The physiological processes in Scleractinian corals tend to scale allometrically as a result of physical and geometric constraints on body size and shape. There is a direct relationship between scaling to thermal stress, thus, the relationship between allometric scaling and rates of heating and cooling in coral microenvironments is a subject of great interest. The primary aim of this study was to develop an approximation that predicts coral thermal microenvironments as a function of colony morphology (shape and size), light or irradiance, and flow velocity or regime. To do so, we provided intuitive interpretation of their energy budgets for both massive and branching colonies, and then quantified the heat-size exponent (b*) and allometric constant (m) using logarithmic linear regression. The data demonstrated a positive relationship between thermal rates and changes in irradiance, A/V ratio, and flow, with an interaction where turbulent regime had less influence on overall stress which may serve to ameliorate the effects of temperature rise compared to the laminar regime. These findings indicated that smaller corals have disproportionately higher stress, however they can reach thermal equilibrium quicker. Moreover, excellent agreements between the predicted and simulated microscale temperature values with no significant bias were observed for both the massive and branching colonies, indicating that the numerical approximation should be within the accuracy with which they could be measured. This study may assist in estimating the coral microscale temperature under known conditions of water flow and irradiance, in particular when examining the intra- and inter-colony variability found during periods of bleaching conditions.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5638381?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Robert H Ong
Andrew J C King
Jaap A Kaandorp
Benjamin J Mullins
M Julian Caley
spellingShingle Robert H Ong
Andrew J C King
Jaap A Kaandorp
Benjamin J Mullins
M Julian Caley
The effect of allometric scaling in coral thermal microenvironments.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Robert H Ong
Andrew J C King
Jaap A Kaandorp
Benjamin J Mullins
M Julian Caley
author_sort Robert H Ong
title The effect of allometric scaling in coral thermal microenvironments.
title_short The effect of allometric scaling in coral thermal microenvironments.
title_full The effect of allometric scaling in coral thermal microenvironments.
title_fullStr The effect of allometric scaling in coral thermal microenvironments.
title_full_unstemmed The effect of allometric scaling in coral thermal microenvironments.
title_sort effect of allometric scaling in coral thermal microenvironments.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description A long-standing interest in marine science is in the degree to which environmental conditions of flow and irradiance, combined with optical, thermal and morphological characteristics of individual coral colonies, affects their sensitivity of thermal microenvironments and susceptibility to stress-induced bleaching within and/or among colonies. The physiological processes in Scleractinian corals tend to scale allometrically as a result of physical and geometric constraints on body size and shape. There is a direct relationship between scaling to thermal stress, thus, the relationship between allometric scaling and rates of heating and cooling in coral microenvironments is a subject of great interest. The primary aim of this study was to develop an approximation that predicts coral thermal microenvironments as a function of colony morphology (shape and size), light or irradiance, and flow velocity or regime. To do so, we provided intuitive interpretation of their energy budgets for both massive and branching colonies, and then quantified the heat-size exponent (b*) and allometric constant (m) using logarithmic linear regression. The data demonstrated a positive relationship between thermal rates and changes in irradiance, A/V ratio, and flow, with an interaction where turbulent regime had less influence on overall stress which may serve to ameliorate the effects of temperature rise compared to the laminar regime. These findings indicated that smaller corals have disproportionately higher stress, however they can reach thermal equilibrium quicker. Moreover, excellent agreements between the predicted and simulated microscale temperature values with no significant bias were observed for both the massive and branching colonies, indicating that the numerical approximation should be within the accuracy with which they could be measured. This study may assist in estimating the coral microscale temperature under known conditions of water flow and irradiance, in particular when examining the intra- and inter-colony variability found during periods of bleaching conditions.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5638381?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT roberthong theeffectofallometricscalingincoralthermalmicroenvironments
AT andrewjcking theeffectofallometricscalingincoralthermalmicroenvironments
AT jaapakaandorp theeffectofallometricscalingincoralthermalmicroenvironments
AT benjaminjmullins theeffectofallometricscalingincoralthermalmicroenvironments
AT mjuliancaley theeffectofallometricscalingincoralthermalmicroenvironments
AT roberthong effectofallometricscalingincoralthermalmicroenvironments
AT andrewjcking effectofallometricscalingincoralthermalmicroenvironments
AT jaapakaandorp effectofallometricscalingincoralthermalmicroenvironments
AT benjaminjmullins effectofallometricscalingincoralthermalmicroenvironments
AT mjuliancaley effectofallometricscalingincoralthermalmicroenvironments
_version_ 1724919379458523136