Coral reefs in Sanya Bay have been degrading in recent decades under climate change and human activities. To identify physiological changes of scleractinian corals and corresponding influencing factors, aquatic environmental factors and physiological parameters of Pocillopora damicornis, Porites pukoensis and their symbiotic zooxanthellae were examined in four Sanya Bay coral reef areas in December 2020 (winter) and July 2021 (summer). The density and chlorophyll a+c2 content of the symbiotic zooxanthellae were significantly high in winter and low in summer. Superoxide dismutase and caspase3 activities of corals and zooxanthellae were high in summer and low in winter, whereas catalase activity showed the opposite pattern. The variations were consistent for both coral symbionts. Water temperature and salinity were the main factors affecting the physiological variations of corals. Compared with winter, the high temperature/low salinity aquatic environment in summer reduced the density and chlorophyll a+c2 content of zooxanthellae, resulting in high superoxide dismutase and caspase3 activities in the corals and zooxanthellae. In addition, turbidity was an important factor affecting the physiological characteristics of coral–zooxanthellae symbionts among the four coral reef areas. Our results have important implications for understanding the changes in coral reef communities in Sanya Bay and coral reef protection.
Behavioral economics has the potential to inform the design of incentives to improve disease screening programs by accounting for various behavioral biases. We investigate the association between multiple behavioral economics concepts and the perceived effectiveness of incentive strategies for behavioral change among older patients with a chronic disease. This association is examined by focusing on diabetic retinopathy screening, which is recommended but very variably followed by persons living with diabetes. Five time and risk preference concepts (i.e., utility curvature, probability weighting, loss aversion, discount rate, and present-bias) are estimated simultaneously in a structural econometric framework, based on a series of deliberately-designed economic experiments offering real money. We find that higher discount rates and loss aversion and lower probability weighting are significantly associated with lower perceived effectiveness of intervention strategies whereas present-bias and utility curvature have an insignificant association with it. Finally, we also observe strong urban vs. rural heterogeneity in the association between our behavioral economic concepts and the perceived effectiveness of intervention strategies.
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