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Recruitment and larval connectivity of a remnant Acropora community in the Arabian Gulf,United Arab Emirates
Authors:Bento  Rita  Cavalcante  Georgenes  Mateos-Molina  Daniel  Riegl  Bernhard  Bejarano  Ivonne
Institution:1.Emirates Nature - World Wide Fund for Nature, P.O. Box 23304, Dubai, United Arab Emirates
;2.Department of Biology, Chemistry and Environmental Sciences, American University of Sharjah, PO Box 26666, Sharjah, United Arab Emirates
;3.Instituto de Ciências Atmosféricas, Universidade Federal de Alagoas, Maceió, AL, CEP: 57072-970, Brazil
;4.Departamento de Ecología e Hidrología, Universidad de Murcia, Campus Espinardo, 30100, Murcia, Spain
;5.Halmos College of Natural Sciences and Oceanography, Nova Southeastern University, Dania Beach, FL, USA
;
Abstract:

Coral cover and community structure in the Arabian Gulf have changed considerably in recent decades. Recurrent bleaching events have dramatically reduced the abundance of previously dominant Acropora corals and have given space to other more thermally resistant coral taxa. The loss of Acropora spp. has reduced reef structural complexity and associated biodiversity. Sir Bu Nair Island (SBN) is a nature reserve in the United Arab Emirates that sustains some of the last dense and extensive Acropora stands in the southern Gulf. This study investigated coral recruitment at a southern coral reef on SBN and examined larval dispersal and reef connectivity between SBN and other local and regional reefs through an agent-based model coupled with a 3D hydrodynamic model. Recruitment was surveyed with settlement tiles deployed from April to September 2019. Contrary to other reefs in the Gulf, we found that Acropora is indeed the major coral recruiter settling at SBN reefs, followed by Porites. The models indicate that SBN reefs are mostly self-seeding but also connected to other reefs in the Gulf. SBN can supply coral larvae to the neighbouring islands Siri and Abu Musa, and nearby reefs along with the north-eastern Emirates, Iranian coast and Strait of Hormuz. Findings highlight the importance of SBN to protect remnant populations of the locally almost extinct Acropora in a region where natural coral recovery is increasingly sparse.

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