Whole Genome Sequencing Reveals Genetic Differences Between Symbiodiniaceae Populations Among Reproductively and Geographically Isolated Acropora Colonies in Western Australia
2025

Genetic Differences in Coral Symbionts

Sample size: 34 publication 10 minutes Evidence: high

Author Information

Author(s): Sanna Y. Eriksson, Mikhail V. Matz, Peter D. Vize, Natalie L. Rosser

Primary Institution: University of Wollongong

Hypothesis

Does whole genome sequencing reveal genetic differences between Symbiodiniaceae populations in isolated Acropora colonies?

Conclusion

The study found significant genetic differences in Symbiodiniaceae populations between geographic regions and spawning seasons.

Supporting Evidence

  • Significant genetic differentiation was found between Symbiodiniaceae populations in coral hosts.
  • Whole genome sequencing improved the sensitivity to detect genetic population structure.
  • Genetic differences were aligned with reproductive seasonality of the coral host.

Takeaway

This study shows that corals have different types of tiny algae living with them, and these differences can depend on where the corals live and when they reproduce.

Methodology

The study used low-coverage whole genome sequencing to analyze genetic diversity in coral symbionts.

Limitations

The effects of location and spawning season could not be disentangled in the analysis.

Participant Demographics

Coral samples were collected from two species, Acropora cf. secale and Acropora millepora, in Western Australia.

Statistical Information

P-Value

0.001

Statistical Significance

p<0.05

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

10.1002/ece3.70771

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