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1.
Coral core records, combined with measurements of coral community structure, were used to assess the long-term impact of multiple
environmental stressors on reef assemblages along an environmental gradient. Multiple proxies (luminescent lines, Ba/Ca, δ 15N) that reflect different environmental conditions (freshwater discharge, sediment delivery to the nearshore, nutrient availability
and transformations) were measured in Porites coral cores collected from nearshore reefs at increasing distance from the intensively agricultural region of Mackay (Queensland,
Australia). The corals provide a record (1968–2002) of the frequency and intensity of exposure to terrestrial runoff and fertilizer-derived
nitrogen and were used to assess how the present-day coral community composition may have been influenced by flood-related
disturbance. Reefs closest to the mainland (5–32 km offshore) were characterized by low hard coral cover (≤10%), with no significant
differences among locations. Distinct annual luminescent lines and elevated Ba/Ca values (4.98 ± 0.63 μmol mol −1; mean ± SD) in the most inshore corals (Round Top Island; 5 km offshore) indicated chronic, sub-annual exposure to freshwater
and resuspended terrestrial sediment that may have historically prevented reef formation. By contrast, corals from Keswick
Island (32 km offshore) indicated episodic, high-magnitude exposure to Pioneer River discharge during extreme flood events
(e.g., 1974, 1991), with strongly luminescent lines and substantially enriched coral skeletal δ 15N (12–14‰). The reef assemblages at Keswick and St. Bees islands were categorically different from all other locations, with
high fleshy macroalgal cover (80.1 ± 7.2% and 62.7 ± 7.1%, respective mean ± SE) overgrowing dead reef matrix. Coral records
from Scawfell Island (51 km offshore) indicated little exposure to Pioneer catchment influence: all locations from Scawfell
and further offshore had total hard and soft coral cover comparable to largely undisturbed nearshore to middle shelf reefs
of the southern Great Barrier Reef. 相似文献
2.
This study describes the natural turbidity regimes at two inshore turbid reefs on the central Great Barrier Reef where wind-driven waves are the main agent of sediment resuspension. Many corals on inshore turbid reefs have adapted to high and fluctuating turbidity, however, anthropogenic activities such as dredging are speculated to produce larger and more prolonged turbidity events that may exceed the environmental tolerance and adaptive capacity of corals on these reefs. Natural turbidity regimes must be described and understood to determine whether and when coral communities on inshore turbid reefs are at risk from anthropogenically elevated turbidity, but at present few baseline studies exist. Here, we present turbidity data from (a) Middle Reef, a semi-protected reef located between Magnetic Island and Townsville and (b) Paluma Shoals, a reef exposed to higher energy wind and waves located in Halifax Bay. Instruments were deployed on both reefs for 16 days to measure spatial and temporal variations in turbidity and its driving forces (waves, currents, tides). Locally driven wind waves were the key driver of turbidity, but the strength of the relationship was dependent on wave exposure. Turbidity regimes thus vary markedly over individual reefs and this is reflected in community assemblage distributions, with a high abundance of heterotrophic corals (e.g. Goniopora) in reef habitats subjected to large fluctuations in turbidity (>100 NTU). A turbidity model developed using local wind speed data explained up to 75 % and up to 46 % of the variance in turbidity at Paluma Shoals and Middle Reef, respectively. Although the model was based on a brief two-week observational period, it reliably predicted variations in 24-h averaged turbidity and identified periods when turbidity rose above ambient baseline levels, offering reef managers insights into turbidity responses to modified climate and coastal sediment delivery regimes. 相似文献
3.
High concentrations of acrylate, 542–683 μmol g −1 of the non-skeletal dry mass (DM), were measured in the Great Barrier Reef coral, Acropora millepora, using quantitative nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (qNMR). As the amount of NaCl salt in the samples was substantial
but variable, the total carbon (TC) in the coral extracts was determined, and the carbon due to acrylate found to represent
13–15% of the TC present in the total organic extracts (TOE). Acrylate, a C 3 compound, is thus a substantial carbon source in the coral holobiont and is known to be derived from dimethylsulfoniopropionate
(DMSP), which has previously been found in corals and other organisms that harbor Symbiodinium spp. The reason for such high levels of acrylate in the corals is unknown; possible functions include antimicrobial and/or
antioxidant roles, as well as playing a role in the structuring of the healthy resident coral bacteria. 相似文献
4.
The distribution and abundance of soft coral genera on reefs of the central Great Barrier Reef was investigated in relation
to reef position, recent history of disturbance, wave exposure, substratum slope and depth. Eighty-five 25 m long transects
were surveyed at 10 m depth on windward sides of 14 mid- and outer-shelf reefs. A further 75 transects in different zones
on one mid-shelf reef (Davies Reef) between 5 and 30 m depth were investigated. The crown-of-thorns starfish Acanthaster planci had caused large-scale mortality of scleractinians on eight of these reefs five to ten years prior to the study, and as a
result, scleractinian cover was only 35–55% of that on the six unimpacted reefs. On the impacted reefs, stony corals with
massive and encrusting growths form had smaller average colony diameters but similar or slightly lower numerical abundance.
In contrast, mean colony size, cover and abundance of branching stony corals showed no difference between impacted and unimpacted
reefs. Twenty-four genera of soft corals (in eight families) were recorded, and none showed different abundance or cover in
areas of former A. planci impact, compared to unaffected sites. Similarly, no difference was detected among locations in the numbers or area cover
of sponges, tunicates, zoanthids, Halimeda or other macro-algae. Mean soft coral cover was 2 to 5% at 10 m on sheltered mid-shelf reefs, and 12 to 17% on more current-exposed
reefs. Highest cover and abundances generally occurred on platforms of outer-shelf reefs exposed to relatively strong currents
but low wave energy. On Davies Reef, cover and colony numbers of the families Nephtheidae and Xeniidae were low within the
zone of wave impact, in flow-protected bays and lagoons, on shaded steep slopes, and at depths above 10 and below 25 m. In
contrast, distributions of genera of the family Alcyoniidae were not related to these physical parameters. The physical conditions
of a large proportion of habitats appear “sub-optimal” for the fastest growing taxa, possibly preventing an invasion of the
cleared space. Thus, in the absence of additional stress these shallow-water fore-reef zones appear sufficiently resilient
to return to their pre-outbreak state of scleractinian dominance.
Accepted: 20 August 1996 相似文献
5.
Exposure of coral reefs to river plumes carrying increasing loads of nutrients and sediments is a pressing issue for coral
reefs around the world including the Great Barrier Reef (GBR). Laboratory experiments were conducted to investigate the effects
of changes in inorganic nutrients (nitrate, ammonium and phosphate), salinity and various types of suspended sediments in
isolation and in combination on rates of fertilisation and early embryonic development of the scleractinian coral Acropora millepora. Dose–response experiments showed that fertilisation declined significantly with increasing sediments and decreasing salinity,
while inorganic nutrients at up to 20 μM nitrate or ammonium and 4 μM phosphate had no significant effect on fertilisation.
Suspended sediments of ≥100 mg l −1 and salinity of 30 ppt reduced fertilisation by >50%. Developmental abnormality occurred in 100% of embryos at 30 ppt salinity,
and no fertilisation occurred at ≤28 ppt. Another experiment tested interactions between sediment, salinity and nutrients
and showed that fertilisation was significantly reduced when nutrients and low concentrations of sediments co-occurred, although
both on their own had no effect on fertilisation rates. Similarly, while slightly reduced salinity on its own had no effect,
fertilisation was reduced when it coincided with elevated levels of sediments or nutrients. Both these interactions were synergistic.
A third experiment showed that sediments with different geophysical and nutrient properties had differential effects on fertilisation,
possibly related to sediment and nutrient properties. The findings highlight the complex nature of the effects of changing
water quality on coral health, particularly stressing the significance of water quality during coral spawning time.
Communicated by Environment Editor Professor Rob van Woesik 相似文献
6.
This 14-year study (1989–2003) develops recovery benchmarks based on a period of very strong coral recovery in Acropora-dominated assemblages on the Great Barrier Reef (GBR) following major setbacks from the predatory sea-star Acanthaster planci in the early 1980s. A space for time approach was used in developing the benchmarks, made possible by the choice of three
study reefs (Green Island, Feather Reef and Rib Reef), spread along 3 degrees of latitude (300 km) of the GBR. The sea-star
outbreaks progressed north to south, causing death of corals that reached maximum levels in the years 1980 (Green), 1982 (Feather)
and 1984 (Rib). The reefs were initially surveyed in 1989, 1990, 1993 and 1994, which represent recovery years 5–14 in the
space for time protocol. Benchmark trajectories for coral abundance, colony sizes, coral cover and diversity were plotted
against nominal recovery time (years 5–14) and defined as non-linear functions. A single survey of the same three reefs was
conducted in 2003, when the reefs were nominally 1, 3 and 5 years into a second recovery period, following further Acanthaster impacts and coincident coral bleaching events around the turn of the century. The 2003 coral cover was marginally above the
benchmark trajectory, but colony density (colonies.m −2) was an order of magnitude lower than the benchmark, and size structure was biased toward larger colonies that survived the
turn of the century disturbances. The under-representation of small size classes in 2003 suggests that mass recruitment of
corals had been suppressed, reflecting low regional coral abundance and depression of coral fecundity by recent bleaching
events. The marginally higher cover and large colonies of 2003 were thus indicative of a depleted and aging assemblage not
yet rejuvenated by a strong cohort of recruits. 相似文献
7.
Long-term (millennial timescale) records of coral community structure can be developed from the analysis of corals preserved
in radiometrically dated reef cores. Here, we present such a record (based on six cores) from Lugger Shoal, a turbid zone,
nearshore reef on the inner-shelf of the central Great Barrier Reef. Lugger Shoal initiated growth ~800 cal yBP. It is constructed
of large in situ Porites bommies, between which a framework of coral rubble (dominated by Acropora pulchra, Montipora mollis, Galaxea fascicularis and Cyphastrea serailia) has accumulated. Reef accretion occurred under conditions of net long-term fine-grained, terrigenous sediment accumulation,
and with a coral community dominated throughout by a consistent, but low diversity, suite of coral taxa. This dataset supports
recent suggestions that nearshore coral communities that establish themselves under conditions that are already close to the
thresholds for coral survival may be resilient to water quality deteriorations associated with human activities. 相似文献
8.
Of all reef-building coral species, 80–85 % initially draw their intracellular symbionts (dinoflagellates of the genus Symbiodinium) from the environment. Although Symbiodinium cells are crucial for the growth of corals and the formation of coral reefs, little is known about how corals first encounter free-living Symbiodinium cells. We report how the supply of free-living Symbiodinium cells to the benthos by adult corals can increase the rate of horizontal symbiont acquisition for conspecific recruits. Three species of newly settled aposymbiotic (i.e., symbiont-free) corals were maintained in an open aquarium system containing: sterilized sediment and adult coral fragments combined; adult coral fragments alone; sterilized sediment alone; or seawater at Heron Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia. In all instances, the combination of an adult coral and sediment resulted in the highest symbiont acquisition rates by juvenile corals (up to five-fold greater than seawater alone). Juvenile corals exposed to individual treatments of adult coral or sediment produced an intermediate acquisition response (<52 % of recruits), and symbiont acquisition from unfiltered seawater was comparatively low (<20 % of recruits). Additionally, benthic free-living Symbiodinium cells reached their highest densities in the adult coral + sediment treatment (up to 1.2 × 104 cells mL−1). Our results suggest that corals seed microhabitats with free-living Symbiodinium cells suitable for many coral species during the process of coral recruitment. 相似文献
9.
Spatial and temporal variabilities in species composition, abundance, distribution, and bioeroding activity of euendolithic
microorganisms were investigated in experimental blocks of the massive coral Porites along an inshore–offshore transect across the northern Great Barrier Reef (Australia) over a 3-year period. Inshore reefs
showed turbid and eutrophic waters, whereas the offshore reefs were characterized by oligotrophic waters. The euendolithic
microorganisms and their ecological characteristics were studied using techniques of microscopy, petrographic sections, and
image analysis. Results showed that euendolithic communities found in blocks of coral were mature. These communities were
dominated by the chlorophyte Ostreobium quekettii, the cyanobacterium Plectonema terebrans, and fungi. O. quekettii was found to be the principal agent of microbioerosion, responsible for 70–90% of carbonate removal. In the offshore reefs,
this oligophotic chlorophyte showed extensive systems of filaments that penetrated deep inside coral skeletons (up to 4.1 mm)
eroding as much as 1 kg CaCO 3 eroded m −2 year −1. The percentage of colonization by euendolithic filaments at the surface of blocks did not vary significantly among sites,
while their depths of penetration, especially that of O. quekettii (0.6–4.1 mm), increased significantly and gradually with the distance from the shore. Rates of microbioerosion (0.1–1.4 kg
m −2 after 1 year and 0.2–1.3 kg m −2 after 3 years of exposure) showed a pattern similar to the one found for the depth of penetration of O. quekettii filaments. Accordingly, oligotrophic reefs had the highest rates of microbioerosion of up to 1.3 kg m −2 year −1, whereas the development of euendolithic communities in inshore reefs appeared to be limited by turbidity, high sedimentation
rates, and low grazing pressure (rates <0.5 kg m −2 after 3 years). Those results suggest that boring microorganisms, including O. quekettii, have a significant impact on the overall calcium carbonate budget of coral reef ecosystems, which varies according to environmental
conditions. 相似文献
10.
Thermal‐stress events that cause coral bleaching and mortality have recently increased in frequency and severity. Yet few studies have explored conditions that moderate coral bleaching. Given that high light and high ocean temperature together cause coral bleaching, we explore whether corals at turbid localities, with reduced light, are less likely to bleach during thermal‐stress events than corals at other localities. We analyzed coral bleaching, temperature, and turbidity data from 3,694 sites worldwide with a Bayesian model and found that Kd490, a measurement positively related to turbidity, between 0.080 and 0.127 reduced coral bleaching during thermal‐stress events. Approximately 12% of the world's reefs exist within this “moderating turbidity” range, and 30% of reefs that have moderating turbidity are in the Coral Triangle. We suggest that these turbid nearshore environments may provide some refuge through climate change, but these reefs will need high conservation status to sustain them close to dense human populations. 相似文献
11.
Viviparous, branching corals such as Seriatopora hystrix are expected to generate most recruits through asexual reproduction (fission or fragmentation) but are expected to use sexual reproduction to produce widely dispersed colonists. In this study, allozyme electrophoresis was used to test for variation in the relative contributions of sexual and asexual reproduction to recruitment and to assess the apparent scale of larval dispersal (gene flow) in the central Great Barrier Reef. Fifty-seven collections (within ≤ 25 m 2) of fragments from sets of approximately 40 colonies were made (where possible) within each of five habitats on each of 12 reefs. These reefs, within the central region of the Great Barrier Reef, were separated by up to 90 km and included one inner-shelf continental island and groups of seven midshelf reefs and four outer-shelf reefs. Most collections contained a high level of multilocus genotypic diversity and hence showed little evidence of recruitment through fragmentation, although the majority of collections displayed large and consistent deficits of heterozygotes. Allele frequencies varied greatly among collections ( FST = 0.43), and this variation was sufficient to explain two-thirds of observed deficiencies of heterozygotes via a Wahlund effect. A hierarchical assessment of FST values revealed that 45% of allelic variation occurred among reefs ( FST = 0.20), and only 16% of variation within reefs was explained by variation among five major habitat types ( FST = 0.05). A relatively small component of the total variation among samples was attributable to across-shelf variation among the groups of middle- and outer-shelf reefs ( FST = 0.03); however, the outer-shelf reefs form a single UPGMA cluster separate from all but 4 of the other 43 collections. These data imply that widespread dispersal does occur but that the direction or magnitude of gene flow may be influenced by the along-shelf movement of major ocean currents and weather-dependent currents on or near reefs. Each reef, therefore, forms a partially isolated and highly subdivided population. 相似文献
12.
Interactions between predators and prey organisms are of fundamental importance to ecological communities. While the ecological
impact that grazing predators can have in terrestrial and temperate marine systems are well established, the importance of
coral grazers on tropical reefs has rarely been considered. In this study, we estimate the biomass of coral tissue consumed
by four prominent species of corallivorous butterflyfishes. Sub-adult butterflyfishes (60–70 mm, 6–11 g) remove between 0.6
and 0.9 g of live coral tissue per day, while larger adults (>110 mm, ~40–50 g) remove between 1.5 and 3 g of coral tissue
each day. These individual consumption rates correspond to the population of coral-feeding butterflyfishes at three exposed
reef crest habitats at Lizard Island, Great Barrier Reef, consuming between 14.6 g (±2.0) and 19.6 g (±3.9) .200 m −2 day −1 of coral tissue. When standardised to the biomass of butterflyfishes present, a combined reefwide removal rate of 4.2 g (±1.2)
of coral tissue is consumed per 200 m −2 kg −1 of coral-feeding butterflyfishes. The quantity of coral tissue removed by these predators is considerably larger than previously
expected and indicates that coral grazers are likely to play an important role in the transfer of energy fixed by corals to
higher consumers. Chronic coral consumption by butterflyfishes is expected to exact a large energetic cost upon prey corals
and contribute to an increased rate of coral loss on reefs already threatened by anthropogenic pressure and ongoing climate
change. 相似文献
13.
There is limited knowledge of the orientation cues used by reef fish in their movement among different habitats, especially
those cues used during darkness. Although acoustic cues have been found to be important for settlement-stage fish as they
seek settlement habitats, only a small number of studies support the possible role of acoustic cues in the orientation of
post-settled and adult reef fish. Therefore, the aim of this study was to determine whether habitat-specific acoustic cues
were involved in the nocturnal movements of juvenile reef fish to small experimental patch reefs that were broadcasting sound
previously recorded from different habitats (Fringing Reef, Lagoon, Silent). Juvenile fish arriving at each patch reef were
caught the next morning by divers and were identified. There were a greater number of occasions when juvenile fish (from all
species together) moved onto the patch reefs broadcasting Fringing Reef and Lagoon sound (43 and 38%, respectively) compared
to Silent reefs (19%) (χ 2 = 33.5; P < 0.05). There were significantly more occasions when juvenile fish from the family Nemipteridae were attracted to the patch
reefs broadcasting Lagoon sound (63%) versus those reefs broadcasting either Fringing Reef sound (31%) or Silent (6%). In
contrast, there were more occasions when juveniles from the family Pomacentridae were attracted to the patch reefs broadcasting
Fringing Reef sound (56%) than either Lagoon (24%) or Silent patch reefs (20%) (χ 2 = 19.5; P < 0.05). These results indicate that some juvenile fish use specific habitat sounds to guide their nocturnal movements. Therefore,
the fish are able to not only use the directional information contained in acoustic cues, but can also interpret the content
of the acoustic signals for relevant habitat information which is then used in their decision-making for orientation. 相似文献
14.
Summary The chief mode of carbonate sedimentation on the Belizean atolls Glovers Reef, Lighthouse Reef and Turneffe Islands is the
accumulation of organically-derived particles. Variations in the distribution of the composition and grain-sizes of surface
sediments, collected along transects across the atolls, are environmentally controlled. Two major sediment types may be distinguished.
(1) Reef and fore reef sediments are dominated by fragments of coral, coralline algae and Halimeda. Mean grain-sizes range from 1–2 mm. (2) Back reef sediments contain more mollusk fragments, more fine-grained sediment (<125
μm) and appear to have fewer Halimeda fragments. In addition, sediments from inner platforms and shallow lagoonal parts of Glovers and Lighthouse Reefs comprise
non-skeletal grains, namely fecal pellets. Sediments from lagoonal patch reefs may contain up to 20% coral fragments. Mean
grain-sizes range from 0.1–1 mm and are finest on the inner platform and lagoon floor of the back reef environment. Within
the reef and fore reef environments, it is not possible to distinguish sub-environments on the basis of textural and compositional
differences of the sediments. Sediments from patch reefs contrast with those from back reef lagoons and inner platforms and
are similar in terms of grain-sizes and compositions to reef and fore reef surface sediments.
Non-skeletal grains forming in shallow parts of the back reef in Glovers and Lighthouse Reefs are interpreted to be indurated
by interstitial precipitation of calcium carbonate from warm, supersaturated water flushing the sediment. The lack of hardened
non-skeletal particles in the back reef sediments of Turneffe Islands is most probably due to the abundance of muddy, organic-rich
sediment in the well-protected lagoon. Fine sediment is less permeable and organic films prevent cement overgrowth on particles. 相似文献
15.
Feeding aggregations of three corallivorous gastropods, Drupella cornus, D. fragum and D. rugosa, have caused considerable coral damage on reefs across the Indo-West Pacific. Distribution and abundance of these three species
were explored at Lizard Island, Great Barrier Reef, to determine within-reef variations in density, and spatial relationships
between Drupella and their prey corals. The scales of greatest variation were between reef habitats (combinations of exposure and depth) and
individual coral colonies. Density varied 12-fold among four habitats: exposed crests (2.55/m 2), exposed slopes (0.22/m 2), sheltered crests (0.34/m 2) and sheltered slopes (2.07/m 2). Species composition also varied markedly between habitats. Individuals were highly aggregated, usually forming small clusters
(<10 individuals) on live coral colonies and other substrata, and occasional large aggregations of=200 to>2000. Five basic
tenets for sampling Drupella are established, based on patterns of variation in density and species composition, and small-scale habitat use.
Accepted: 8 February 1999 相似文献
16.
Summary The Java Sea, one of the few modern tropical epeiric seas, is used as an analogue to examine oceanography, stratigraphy, and
reefs of Devonian strata in the Appalachian and Michigan Basins. Nearshore patch reefs and offshore “pinnacle” reefs occur
in both the Java Sea and the Emsian-Eifelian Onondaga Formation in the Appalachian Basin. Nearshore patch reefs also occur
in the Eifelian Formosa Reef Limestone in the Michigan Basin.
The Java Sea is characterized by quasi-estuarine circulation, in which runoff and rainfall exceed evaporation. Nutrient and
organic matter influx from land and from estuarine upwelling contribute to organic rich facies during transgressions and sea
level highstands. Similarly, we propose that high runoff from the Appalachian Mountains and from the Laurentian craton contributed
to slightly reduced salinity in the Appalachian basin, including possible density stratification during Middle Devonian highstands.
By contrast, the Michigan Basin was characterized by antiestuarine circulation, in which evaporation exceeded combined runoff
and rainfall. Contemporaneous Emsian-Eifelian strata in the Michigan Basin are dolomite and dolomitic limestone, rather than
cherty and muddy limestone typical of the Appalachian basin.
Reef composition generally reflects oceanographic circulation regime within the epicontinental seas we examine. Nearshore
reefs of the modern Java Sea and the Onondaga Formation (Appalachian Basin) are dominated by multilobate submassive, dendroid,
and phaceloid corals, and virtually no platy corals or tabular stromatoporoids. Multilobate and phaceloid corals are better
able to accommodate muddy sedimentation. By contrast, offshore pinnacle reefs of the Java Sea and nearshore reefs of the Formosa
Reef Limestone are dominated by platy Acropora (modern) or tabular and laminar stromatoporoids (Devonian). The scarcity of tabular stromatoporoids, and the dominance of
phaceloid corals and dendritic branching corals, in the Onondaga Formation (Appalachian Basin) are herein explained by localized
high productivity conditions driven by quasi-estuarine circulation, rather than cool water. Quasi-estuarine circulation or
localized topographic upwelling leading to highly productive coastal environments may be responsible for other Paleozoic examples
of apparent cool-water carbonate deposition within the tropics, including the Ordovician of Eastern Canada. 相似文献
17.
Disturbed coral reefs are often dominated by dense mat- or canopy-forming assemblages of macroalgae. This study investigated how such dense macroalgal assemblages change the chemical and physical microenvironment for understorey corals, and how the altered environmental conditions affect the physiological performance of corals. Field measurements were conducted on macroalgal-dominated inshore reefs in the Great Barrier Reef in quadrats with macroalgal biomass ranging from 235 to 1029 g DW m −2 dry weight. Underneath mat-forming assemblages, the mean concentration of dissolved oxygen was reduced by 26% and irradiance by 96% compared with conditions above the mat, while concentrations of dissolved organic carbon and soluble reactive phosphorous increased by 26% and 267%, respectively. The difference was significant but less pronounced under canopy-forming assemblages. Dissolved oxygen declined and dissolved inorganic carbon and alkalinity increased with increasing algal biomass underneath mat-forming but not under canopy-forming assemblages. The responses of corals to conditions similar to those found underneath algal assemblages were investigated in an aquarium experiment. Coral nubbins of the species Acropora millepora showed reduced photosynthetic yields and increased RNA/DNA ratios when exposed to conditions simulating those underneath assemblages (pre-incubating seawater with macroalgae, and shading). The magnitude of these stress responses increased with increasing proportion of pre-incubated algal water. Our study shows that mat-forming and, to a lesser extent, canopy-forming macroalgal assemblages alter the physical and chemical microenvironment sufficiently to directly and detrimentally affect the metabolism of corals, potentially impeding reef recovery from algal to coral-dominated states after disturbance. Macroalgal dominance on coral reefs therefore simultaneously represents a consequence and cause of coral reef degradation. 相似文献
18.
Significant coral reef ecosystems occur along the northwest (NW) coast of Australia in an oceanographic setting somewhat
similar to that of the Great Barrier Reef off the northeast (NE) Australian coast. Seasonal and inter-annual variations of
several surface climate variables are described for the NW coastal region of Australia from 10 °–30 °S over the period 1960 to 1992. Average climatic conditions in this region are compared with those for similar latitudes on
the Great Barrier Reef. On average, sea surface temperatures (SSTs) along the NW Australian coast are warmer than at similar
latitudes along the NE coast north of ∼20 °S and cooler than the NE coast at higher latitudes. The annual range of SSTs along the NW coast is lower than found along
the NE coast. There is also lower average cloud amount (and greater incoming solar radiation) along the NW coast compared
with the NE coast. Corals reefs off the NW Australian coast are less likely to be influenced by freshwater and associated
terrestrial impacts than nearshore reefs of the GBR. Although the latitudinal distribution of tropical cyclone activity is
similar along the NW and NE Australian coasts, the total number of tropical cyclones and tropical cyclone days is substantially
higher on the NW coast compared with the NE coast.
Accepted: 22 June 1998 相似文献
19.
Herbivory is a key process structuring plant communities in both terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems, with variation in herbivory
often being related to shifts between alternate states. On coral reefs, regional reductions in herbivores have underpinned
shifts from coral to dominance by leathery macroalgae. These shifts appear difficult to reverse as these macroalgae are unpalatable
to the majority of herbivores, and the macroalgae suppress the recruitment and growth of corals. The removal of macroalgae
is, therefore, viewed as a key ecological process on coral reefs. On the Great Barrier Reef, Sargassum is a dominant macroalgal species following experimentally induced coral–macroalgal phase-shifts. We, therefore, used Sargassum assays and remote video cameras to directly quantify the species responsible for removing macroalgae across a range of coral
reef habitats on Lizard Island, northern Great Barrier Reef. Despite supporting over 50 herbivorous fish species and six macroalgal
browsing species, the video footage revealed that a single species, Naso unicornis, was almost solely responsible for the removal of Sargassum biomass across all habitats. Of the 42,246 bites taken from the Sargassum across all habitats, N. unicornis accounted for 89.8% (37,982) of the total bites, and 94.6% of the total mass standardized bites. This limited redundancy,
both within and across local scales, underscores the need to assess the functional roles of individual species. Management
and conservation strategies may need to look beyond the preservation of species diversity and focus on the maintenance of
ecological processes and the protection of key species in critical functional groups. 相似文献
20.
This paper presents seasonal in situ monitoring data on benthic coverage and coral –algae interactions in high-latitude fringing reefs of the Northern Red Sea over a period of 19 months. More than 30% of all
hermatypic corals were involved in interaction with benthic reef algae during winter compared to 17% during summer, but significant
correlation between the occurrence of coral –algae interactions and monitored environmental factors such as temperature and inorganic nutrient availability was not detected.
Between 5 and 10-m water depth, the macroalgae Caulerpa serrulata,
Peyssonnelia capensis and filamentous turf algae represented almost 100% of the benthic algae involved in interaction with corals. Turf algae were
most frequently (between 77 and 90% of all interactions) involved in interactions with hermatypic corals and caused most tissue
damage to them. Maximum coral tissue loss of 0.75% day −1 was observed for Acropora-turf algae interaction during fall, while an equilibrium between both groups of organisms appeared during summer. Slow-growing
massive corals were more resistant against negative algal influence than fast-growing branching corals. Branching corals of
the genus Acropora partly exhibited a newly observed phenotypic plasticity mechanism, by development of a bulge towards the competing organism,
when in interaction with algae. These findings may contribute to understand the dynamics of phase shifts in coral reefs by
providing seasonally resolved in situ monitoring data on the abundance and the competitive dynamic of coral –algae interactions. 相似文献
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