Heterotrophic feeding on plankton and particulate organic matter (POM) by tropical Scleractinian corals is known to aid in the resistance and recovery from thermally induced bleaching. However, the relative importance of heterotrophy in promoting bleaching resistance and recovery is likely to vary based on ecological context and the severity of heat stress. In 2019, the Pacific Island of Mo\u27orea experienced mass coral mortality during a widespread marine heatwave. Many Acropora hyacinthus colonies on the shallow reef slope (5 m) were resistant to bleaching, while colonies on the deeper fore reef (14 m) often bleached and subsequently recovered, despite similar thermal stress. The role of heterotrophy in this divergent bleaching response was investigated using fatty acid (FA), isotopic, and elemental biomarkers. Multiple complementary lines of evidence, including feeding proxies, isotopic niche overlap, and putative POM FA biomarkers, indicated that bleaching resistant colonies were likely consuming more POM than their bleached and recovered counterparts. Additionally, although visually recovered, host energetics in recovered colonies remained compromised and exhibited proportionally less monounsaturated and polyunsaturated FAs and less relative nitrogen than resistant colonies. We show that corals that rely more on heterotrophic nutrient acquisition can better resist thermally induced bleaching. Our results also revealed the long‐term energetic costs of bleaching even after visual recovery. Ultimately, these results underscore the vital role of coral nutrition in shaping coral bleaching response and recovery
Is data on this page outdated, violates copyrights or anything else? Report the problem now and we will take corresponding actions after reviewing your request.