4 resultados para Corals and coral reef ecosystems
em AMS Tesi di Laurea - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna
Resumo:
Global climate change is impacting coral reefs worldwide, with approximately 19% of reefs being permanently degraded, 15% showing symptoms of imminent collapse, and 20% at risk of becoming critically affected in the next few decades. This alarming level of reef degradation is mainly due to an increase in frequency and intensity of natural and anthropogenic disturbances. Recent evidence has called into question whether corals have the capacity to acclimatize or adapt to climate changes and some groups of corals showed inherent physiological tolerance to environmental stressors. The aim of the present study was to evaluate mRNA expression patterns underlying differences in thermal tolerance in specimen of the common reef-building coral Pocillopora verrucosa collected at different locations in Bangka Island waters (North Sulawesi, Indonesia). Part of the experimental work was carried out at the CoralEye Reef Research Outpost (Bangka Island). This includes sampling of corals at selected sites and at different depths (3 and 12 m) as well as their experimental exposure to an increased water temperature under controlled conditions for 3 and 7 days. Levels of mRNAs encoding ATP synthase (ATPs) NADH dehydrogenase (NDH) and a 70kDa Heat Shock Protein (HSP70) were evaluated by quantitative real time PCR. Transcriptional profiles evaluated under field conditions suggested an adaptation to peculiar local environmental conditions in corals collected at different sites and at the low depth. Nevertheless, high–depth collected corals showed a less pronounced site-to-site separation suggesting more homogenous environmental conditions. Exposure to an elevated temperature under controlled conditions pointed out that corals adapted to the high depth are more sensitive to the effects of thermal stress, so that reacted to thermal challenge by significantly over-expressing the selected gene products. Being continuously exposed to fluctuating environmental conditions, low-depth adapted corals are more resilient to the stress stimulus, and indeed showed unaffected or down-regulated mRNA expression profiles. Overall these results highlight that transcriptional profiles of selected genes involved in cellular stress response are modulated by natural seasonal temperature changes in P. verrucosa. Moreover, specimens living in more variable habitats (low-depth) exhibit higher basal HSP70 mRNA levels, possibly enhancing physiological tolerance to environmental stressors.
Resumo:
Indo-Pacific region encompasses about 75% of world's coral reefs, but hard coral cover in this region experienced a 32% region-wide decline since 1970s. This great change is primarily ascribable to natural and anthropogenic pressures, including climate change and human activities effects. Coral reef conservation requires management strategies oriented to maintain their diversity and the capacity to provide ecosystem goods and services. Coral reef resilience, i.e. the capacity to recover after disturbances, is critical to their long-term persistence. The aims of the present study were to design and to test field experiments intended to measure changes in recruitment processes, as a fundamental aspect of the coral reef resilience. Recruitment experiments, using artificial panels suspended in the water column, were carried out in two Indo-Pacific locations affected by different disturbances: a new mine in Bangka Island (Indonesia), and the increased sedimentation due to coastal dynamics in Vavvaru Island (Maldives). One (or more) putatively disturbed site(s) was selected to be tested against 3 randomly selected control sites. Panels’ arrangement simulates 2 proximities to living corals, i.e. the sources of propagules: few centimetres and 2 meters over. Panels were deployed simultaneously at each site and left submerged for about five months. Recruits were identified to the lowest possible taxonomic level and recruited assemblages were analysed in terms of percent cover. In general it was not possible to detect significant differences between the benthic assemblages recruited in disturbed and control sites. The high variability observed in recruits assemblages structure among control sites may be so large to mask the possible disturbance effects. Only few taxa showed possible effects of the disturb they undergo. The field tests have highlighted strengths and weaknesses of the proposed approach and, based on these results, some possible improvements were suggested.
Resumo:
La temperatura influenza molti dei processi fisiologici degli organismi marini e, considerato che la riproduzione dei coralli sembrerebbe essere sensibile agli stress, è necessario comprendere come questa possa reagire ai cambiamenti climatici globali per riuscire a prevedere le future risposte delle popolazioni. Leptopsammia pruvoti (Scleractinia, Dendrophylliidae) è un corallo solitario non zooxantellato presente in Mediterraneo e lungo le coste Atlantiche dal Portogallo alla Gran Bretagna meridionale, dalla superficie fino a 70 metri di profondità.. È un organismo gonocorico con fecondazione interna. In questo lavoro di tesi sono stati analizzati gli aspetti della gametogenesi di L. pruvoti a diverse latitudini per ottenere risultati preliminari riguardanti le possibili correlazioni tra attività riproduttiva e parametri ambientali (temperatura e irradianza). Tale studio si colloca all’interno del progetto europeo sul riscaldamento globale e biologia dei coralli FP7–IDEAS-ERC “Corals and Global Warming: The Mediterranean versus the Red Sea” (CoralWarm). I risultati presentati in questo lavoro sono relativi a cinque popolazioni di L. pruvoti (Genova, Calafuria, Palinuro, Scilla e Pantelleria) disposte lungo un gradiente latitudinale di temperatura e irradianza nel versante occidentale della penisola italiana. I campioni sono stati raccolti mediante campionamenti mensili effettuati tramite immersioni subacquee. Su ogni campione sono state effettuate misurazioni biometriche e analisi cito-istometriche. Nelle popolazioni analizzate i parametri riproduttivi (fecondità, abbondanza, indice gonadico, dimensione) sono stati messi in relazione con la temperatura di fondo (DT, °C) e l’irradianza solare (W/m2) peculiari di ogni sito. L. pruvoti ha mostrato una sessualità gonocorica in tutti i siti considerati. In tutte le popolazioni, la presenza di due stock di ovociti e la distribuzione degli stadi di maturazione degli spermiari durante le fasi di attività riproduttiva, nell’arco dell’anno, hanno permesso di definire un periodo di reclutamento e uno di maturità gonadica, suggerendo che tali eventi siano influenzati dai cambiamenti stagionali della temperatura dell’acqua e del fotoperiodo. Nel periodo di reclutamento, la fecondità presentava una debole correlazione positiva con i parametri ambientali considerati. Al momento della maturità gonadica gli ovociti erano di dimensioni maggiori e meno numerosi rispetto al periodo precedente, nelle popolazioni con una maggiore temperatura e irradianza. Una possibile interpretazione potrebbe essere l’esistenza di un processo di fusione degli ovociti nel periodo di maturità gonadica che sembrerebbe più marcato nelle popolazioni più calde e maggiormente irradiate. La spermatogenesi, diversamente, non ha delineato finora un pattern chiaramente interpretabile. Con i dati attualmente in nostro possesso, non possiamo tuttavia escludere che le differenze riscontrate nelle dimensioni di ovociti e spermiari lungo il gradiente latitudinale considerato siano dovute a un lieve sfasamento nel raggiungimento della maturità gonadica, pur mantenendo la medesima stagionalità nel ciclo riproduttivo delle diverse popolazioni. Ulteriori studi saranno necessari per poter meglio comprendere i complessi meccanismi che regolano e controllano i processi riproduttivi al variare dei parametri ambientali. In questo modo sarà possibile considerare i risulti ottenuti nel contesto dei cambiamenti climatici globali.
Resumo:
According to various studies, the effects of climate change will be a danger to ecosystems and the population, especially in coastal areas, increasing the risk of floods. Authorities are taking action to prevent future disasters using traditional engineering solutions. These solutions can have high environmental and economic costs, fixing the coastline, increasing the salinization of aquifers, and can be subject to failure mechanisms. For this reason, studies were made to use natural engineering solutions for coastal protection, instead of traditional solutions, to achieve the UN SDGs. Coastal ecosystems have the natural ability to repair and restore themselves, increasing soil elevation, and attenuating waves. One of these solutions is the Double Dyke System, consisting of creating a salt marsh between the first dyke and a second inland. The goal is to protect the coasts and to restore ecosystems. The purpose of this study is to compare the costs of natural engineering solutions with traditional ones. It is assumed that these solutions may be more effective and less expensive in the long run. For this evaluation, a suitability analysis of the polders in the Dutch Zeeland region to assess the costs and benefits under different SLR scenarios was made. A saline intrusion model was also created to analyze the effects of a salt marsh on the aquifers. From the analyzes conducted, the implementation of the DDS turns out to be the cheapest coastal defense system in all SLR scenarios. The presence of a salt marsh could also have a positive impact on the prevention of saline intrusion in the various scenarios considered. The DDS could have a positive economic and environmental impact in the long term, reducing the investment costs for coastal defense and bringing important benefits for the protection of man and nature. Despite the results, more studies are needed on the efficiency of this defense system and on the economic evaluation of non-marketable ecosystem services.