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Benthic community composition affects O2 availability and variability in a Northern Red Sea fringing reef
Authors:Wolfgang Niggl  Andreas F Haas and Christian Wild
Institution:(1) Coral Reef Ecology Group (CORE), GeoBio-Center and Department of Earth and Environmental Science in the Faculty of Geosciences, Ludwig-Maximilians Universit?t, Richard Wagner Str. 10, 80333 Munich, Germany
Abstract:Many coral reef ecosystems experience shifts in benthic community composition from scleractinian corals to algae. However, consequences of such phase shifts on O2 availability, important for many reef organisms, are unresolved. This study therefore comparatively investigated potential in situ effects of different benthic cover by reef macroalgae and scleractinian corals on water column O2 concentrations in a Northern Red Sea fringing reef. Findings revealed that mean daily O2 concentrations at algae-dominated sites were significantly lower compared to coral-dominated sites. Minimum O2 concentrations were significantly negatively correlated, while diurnal variability in O2 concentration was significantly positively correlated, with increasing benthic cover by algae. In contrast, no correlation with coral cover was found. These results indicate that shifts from corals to benthic algae may likely affect both in situ O2 availability and variability. This may be particularly pronounced in reef systems with low water exchange (e.g. closed lagoons) or under calm weather conditions and suggests potential O2-mediated effects on reef organisms.
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