Dataset: Photosystem II (PSII) photochemical efficiency (Yield PSII) recorded at noon (ΔF/Fm') and at dusk (Fv/Fm) on corals from the species Orbicella faveolata, transplanted from Varadero and Rosario reefs, Colombia, May 2017

ValidatedFinal no updates expectedDOI: 10.1575/1912/bco-dmo.786485.1Version 1 (2020-01-08)Dataset Type:Other Field Results

Principal Investigator: Mónica Medina (Pennsylvania State University)

Co-Principal Investigator: Roberto Iglesias-Prieto (Pennsylvania State University)

Contact: Tomás Lopez Lodoño (Pennsylvania State University)

BCO-DMO Data Manager: Nancy Copley (Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)


Project: RAPID: Coral robustness: lessons from an "improbable" reef (Varadero Reef)


Abstract

Photosystem II (PSII) photochemical efficiency (Yield PSII) recorded at noon (ΔF/Fm') and at dusk (Fv/Fm) on corals from the species Orbicella faveolata. Coral fragments were transplanted from Varadero and Rosario reefs to Varadero reef, Rosario reef, or Cartagena Bay, Colombia, May 2017.

These are primary data of the PSII photochemical efficiency (Yield PSII) recorded at noon (ΔF/Fm') and at dusk (Fv/Fm) in a reciprocal transplant experiment and on random colonies. The data reported here were obtained from coral fragments used in a transplant experiment.

The Varadero Reef is located south-west of the Cartagena Bay close to the southern strait that connects the Bay to the Caribbean Sea in Colombia (10°18’23.3”N, 75°35’08.0”W). The Bay is a receiving estuary from the Magdalena River through the Canal del Dique, a man-made channel whose construction and operation dates back almost a century. Three study sites with contrasting light regimes were considered in order to evaluate the role of the light-environment perturbation associated with the Dique channel freshwater plume on the photosynthetic performance of corals from Varadero: 1) Varadero reef at 3.5m depth close to the Dique channel mouth (10°18’23.3”N, 75°35’08.0”W), 2) Rosario reef at 12m depth as clear-control site 21 km southwest from Varadero (10°11'12.1"N, 75°44'43.0"W), and 3) Cartagena Bay at 3m depth, the closest site to the Dique channel mouth and most turbid among the three sites (10°18'5.80"N, 75°34'37.10"W).

These data were used in the manuscript “Degradation of the underwater light environment: physiological and ecological consequences for reef corals” submitted to the Journal Nature Communications Biology. [under review. 2019-12-28]


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Results

López-Londoño, T., Galindo-Martínez, C. T., Gómez-Campo, K., González-Guerrero, L. A., Roitman, S., Pollock, F. J., Pizarro, V., López-Victoria, M., Medina, M., & Iglesias-Prieto, R. (2021). Physiological and ecological consequences of the water optical properties degradation on reef corals. Coral Reefs, 40(4), 1243–1256. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00338-021-02133-7