Clements Cody S, Rasher Douglas B, Hoey Andrew S, Bonito Victor E, Hay Mark E
School of Biological Sciences, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA 30332, USA.
Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences, East Boothbay, ME 04544.
Mar Ecol Prog Ser. 2018;586:11-20. doi: 10.3354/meps12410. Epub 2018 Jan 11.
Tropical reefs are commonly transitioning from coral- to macroalgal-dominance, producing abrupt, and often lasting, shifts in community composition and ecosystem function. Although negative effects of macroalgae on corals are well documented, whether such effects vary with spatial scale or the density of macroalgae remains inadequately understood, as does the legacy of their impact on coral growth. Using closely adjacent coral- versus macroalgal-dominated areas, we tested effects of macroalgal competition on the Indo-Pacific corals and . When corals were transplanted to areas of: ) macroalgal-dominance, ) macroalgal-dominance but with nearby macroalgae removed, or ) coral-dominance lacking macroalgae, coral growth was equivalently high in plots without macroalgae and low (62-90% less) in plots with macroalgae, regardless of location. In a separate experiment, we raised corals above the benthos in each area and exposed them to differing densities of the dominant macroalga . Coral survivorship was high (≥ 93% after 3 months) and did not differ among treatments, whereas the growth of both coral species decreased as a function of density. When was removed after two months, there was no legacy effect of macroalgal density on coral growth over the next seven months; however, there was no compensation for previously depressed growth. In sum, macroalgal impacts were density dependent, occurred only if macroalgae were in close contact, and coral growth was resilient to prior macroalgal contact. The temporal and spatial constraints of these interactions suggest that corals may be surprisingly resilient to periodic macroalgal competition, which could have important implications for ecosystem trajectories that lead to reef decline or recovery.
热带珊瑚礁通常正从以珊瑚为主转变为以大型藻类为主,导致群落组成和生态系统功能发生突然且往往持久的变化。尽管大型藻类对珊瑚的负面影响已有充分记录,但这种影响是否随空间尺度或大型藻类密度而变化仍未得到充分理解,其对珊瑚生长的影响遗留效应也是如此。我们利用紧邻的以珊瑚为主和以大型藻类为主的区域,测试了大型藻类竞争对印度 - 太平洋珊瑚 和 的影响。当珊瑚被移植到以下区域时:(1)以大型藻类为主的区域,(2)以大型藻类为主但附近大型藻类已移除的区域,或(3)没有大型藻类的以珊瑚为主的区域,无论位置如何,在没有大型藻类的样地中珊瑚生长同样很高,而在有大型藻类的样地中珊瑚生长很低(减少62 - 90%)。在另一个实验中,我们将每个区域的珊瑚提升至底栖生物之上,并使其暴露于不同密度的优势大型藻类 中。珊瑚存活率很高(3个月后≥93%),且各处理之间没有差异,而两种珊瑚的生长均随 密度的增加而下降。两个月后移除 时,在接下来的七个月里大型藻类密度对珊瑚生长没有遗留效应;然而,之前生长受抑制的情况没有得到补偿。总之,大型藻类的影响取决于密度,只有当大型藻类紧密接触时才会发生,并且珊瑚生长对之前与大型藻类的接触具有恢复力。这些相互作用的时间和空间限制表明,珊瑚可能对周期性的大型藻类竞争具有惊人的恢复力,这可能对导致珊瑚礁衰退或恢复所需的生态系统轨迹具有重要意义。