Spatial and Temporal Variability during Periods of "Recovery" after Mass Bleaching on Western Atlantic Coral Reefs |
| |
Authors: | LANG, JUDITH C. LASKER, HOWARD R. GLADFELTER, ELIZABETH H. HALLOCK, PAMELA JAAP, WALTER C. LOSADA, FREDDY J. MULLER, ROBERT G. |
| |
Affiliation: | Texas Memorial Museum, University of Texas Austin, Texas 78705 Department of Biological Sciences, State University of New York at Buffalo Buffalo, New York 14260 P.O. Box 26472, Gallows Bay Station, St. Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands 00824 Department of Marine Science, University of South Florida St. Petersburg, Florida 33701 Florida Marine Research Institute 100 Eighth Ave., S.E., St. Petersburg, Florida 33701 Departamento de Biologia de Organismos e Instituto de Technologia y Ciencias Marinas, Universidad Simon Bolivar A.P. No. 89000, Caracas 1080, Venezuela Florida Marine Research Institute 100 Eighth Ave., S.E., St. Petersburg, Florida 33701 |
| |
Abstract: | Western Atlantic coral reefs were differentially affected bya mass bleaching (discoloration) event in 1987. We periodicallyassessed the "appearance" of zooxanthellate organisms betweenDecember 1987 and June 1988 at nine conspicuously affected sitesin the Bahamas, Florida, St. Croix, and Venezuela, using a standardizedpoint-count technique. Three to four months after the localinitiation of the event, the "bleached" state was still presentin one to three of the most abundant reef coral taxa and ina few of the less common species (n = 5 sites). "Recovery" occurredsomewhat faster at shallower depths, at least in the Bahamasand Florida. Scleractinian corals which were "prolonged bleachers"had foliaceous or massive, rather than branching, morphologies."Bleached" points disappeared from the point counts after $6to $8 months. Long-term field data on spatial and temporal variability inthe dynamics of zooxanthellate organisms would help us to understandthe ecological consequences of bleaching. More generally, weneed to distinguish anthropogenic changes in the structure andfunctioning of reef ecosystems from those which occur naturally.Point-count techniques are well suited for collaborative studiesinvolving rapid quantification of coloration states and healthin reef corals. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 Oxford 等数据库收录! |
|