18Marine heat waves instigated by anthropogenic climate change are causing increasingly frequent 19 and severe coral bleaching events that often lead to widespread coral mortality. While 20 community-wide increases in coral mortality following bleaching events have been documented 21 on reefs around the world, the ecological consequences for conspecific individual colonies 22 exhibiting contrasting phenotypes during thermal stress (e.g. bleached vs. not bleached) are not 23 well understood. Here we describe the ecological outcomes of colonies of the two dominant reef-24 building coral species in Kāne ohe Bay, Hawai i, Montipora capitata and Porites compressa, 25 that exhibited either a bleaching susceptible phenotype (bleached) or resistant phenotype (non-26 bleached) following the second of two consecutive coral bleaching events in Hawai i in 2015.
27Conspecific pairs of adjacent bleaching susceptible vs. resistant corals were tagged on patch 28 reefs in two regions of Kāne ohe Bay with different seawater residence times and terrestrial 29 influence. The ecological consequences (symbiont recovery and mortality) were monitored for 30 two years following the peak of the bleaching event. Bleaching susceptible corals suffered higher 31 partial mortality than bleaching resistant corals of the same species in the first 6 months 32 following thermal stress. Surprisingly, P. compressa had greater resilience following bleaching 33 (faster pigment recovery and lower post-bleaching mortality) than M. capitata, despite having 34 less resistance to bleaching (higher bleaching prevalence and severity). These differences 35 indicate that bleaching susceptibility of a species is not always a good predictor of mortality 36 following a bleaching event. By tracking the fate of individual colonies of resistant and 37 susceptible phenotypes, contrasting ecological consequences of thermal stress were revealed that 38 were undetectable at the population level. Furthermore, this approach revealed individuals that 39 underwent particularly rapid recovery from mortality, including some colonies over a meter in 40 diameter that recovered all live tissue cover from >60% partial mortality within just one year.
41These coral pairs continue to be maintained and monitored in the field, serving as a "living 42 library" for future investigations on the ecology and physiology of coral bleaching. 43 44 45 46 102 2008; Bahr et al., 2017; Hughes et al., 2017). Kāne ohe Bay, Hawai i, located on the northeast 103 coast of O ahu, is an opportune system for investigating this question of how intraspecific 104 variability in coral responses to thermal bleaching events driven by climate change influence 105 coral survival. The two dominant reef-building coral species in the bay, Montipora capitata and 106Porites compressa, both exhibit differences in thermal performance within and between species 107 during bleaching (Grottoli et al., 2006; Cunning et al., 2016; Wall et al., 2019). Differences in 108 5 symbiont associations and nutritional plasticity a...