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Changes in the colour and photosynthetic efficiency of the hermatypic coral Acropora tenuis exposed to Irgarol 1051 at 30 °C seawater temperature
Gushi, M.; Ishibashi, H.; Takayama, K.; Yamashiro, H.; Takeuchi, I. (2021). Changes in the colour and photosynthetic efficiency of the hermatypic coral Acropora tenuis exposed to Irgarol 1051 at 30 °C seawater temperature. Regional Studies in Marine Science 47: 101957. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.rsma.2021.101957
In: Regional Studies in Marine Science. Elsevier: Amsterdam. ISSN 2352-4855, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keywords
    Acropora tenuis (Dana, 1846) [WoRMS]
    Marine/Coastal
Author keywords
    Substance; Acropora tenuis; Coral colour; Hermatypic coral; High seawater temperature; Photosynthetic efficiency

Authors  Top 
  • Gushi, M.
  • Ishibashi, H.
  • Takayama, K.
  • Yamashiro, H.
  • Takeuchi, I.

Abstract
    Besides global warming, coral reefs face various anthropogenic threats, including watershed-based and marine-based contaminants. Recently, Irgarol 1051, a photosystem II herbicide, has been introduced as a “booster” agent in copper-based antifouling paints after global ban of tributyltin (TBT) in January 2008. Irgarol is considered to pose a potential risk to corals. In this study, a clone of Acropora tenuis separated from the colony collected from Sesoko Island, Okinawa, southern Japan, was exposed to 1.0 μg L−1 Irgarol at 27.5 °C and 30.0 °C (higher than the temperature in the warmest month in southern Japan) for 7 d. The coral colour was converted to RGB values, ranging from 0 (darkest) to 255 (brightest). The RGB values under both temperature treatments slightly decreased in the control (no herbicide exposure), but those in both 27.5 °C and 30.0 °C Irgarol treatments increased after day 3. The maximum effective quantum yield (ΔF/Fm′) slightly increased in both 27.5 °C and 30.0 °C control treatments, but decreased in 27.5 °C and 30.0 °C Irgarol treatments after day 1. The exposure to 1.0 μg L−1 Irgarol induced significant differences in RGB values and ΔF/Fm′ compared with those in the control at the same temperature. Regarding the temperature difference (27.5 °C vs. 30.0 °C), no significant differences in RGB values and ΔF/Fm′ were detected in both control and Irgarol treatments. Our results revealed no significant combined effect of Irgarol exposure and 30.0 °C on A. tenuis. These findings suggest that 30.0 °C is a normally inhabitable environmental temperature for A. tenuis. The bleaching of A. tenuis is more likely caused by the exposure to 1.0 μg L−1 Irgarol than by the exposure to high seawater temperature of 30.0 °C.

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