Robinson James P W, Williams Ivor D, Yeager Lauren A, McPherson Jana M, Clark Jeanette, Oliver Thomas A, Baum Julia K
1Department of Biology, University of Victoria, PO BOX 1700, Station CSC, Victoria, BC V8W 2Y2 Canada.
2Lancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster University, Lancaster, LA1 4YQ UK.
Coral Reefs. 2018;37(4):1157-1168. doi: 10.1007/s00338-018-01737-w. Epub 2018 Oct 4.
Our ability to understand natural constraints on coral reef benthic communities requires quantitative assessment of the relative strengths of abiotic and biotic processes across large spatial scales. Here, we combine underwater images, visual censuses and remote sensing data for 1566 sites across 34 islands spanning the central-western Pacific Ocean, to empirically assess the relative roles of abiotic and grazing processes in determining the prevalence of calcifying organisms and fleshy algae on coral reefs. We used regression trees to identify the major predictors of benthic composition and to test whether anthropogenic stress at inhabited islands decouples natural relationships. We show that sea surface temperature, wave energy, oceanic productivity and aragonite saturation strongly influence benthic community composition; overlooking these factors may bias expectations of calcified reef states. Maintenance of grazing biomass above a relatively low threshold (~ 10-20 kg ha) may also prevent transitions to algal-dominated states, providing a tangible management target for rebuilding overexploited herbivore populations. Biophysical relationships did not decouple at inhabited islands, indicating that abiotic influences remain important macroscale processes, even at chronically disturbed reefs. However, spatial autocorrelation among inhabited reefs was substantial and exceeded abiotic and grazing influences, suggesting that natural constraints on reef benthos were superseded by unmeasured anthropogenic impacts. Evidence of strong abiotic influences on reef benthic communities underscores their importance in specifying quantitative targets for coral reef management and restoration that are realistic within the context of local conditions.
我们若要了解珊瑚礁底栖生物群落所受的自然限制,就需要在大空间尺度上对非生物和生物过程的相对强度进行定量评估。在此,我们结合了横跨中西部太平洋的34个岛屿上1566个站点的水下图像、视觉普查和遥感数据,以实证评估非生物和啃食过程在决定珊瑚礁上钙化生物和肉质藻类普遍程度方面的相对作用。我们使用回归树来确定底栖生物组成的主要预测因素,并检验有人居住岛屿上的人为压力是否会使自然关系脱节。我们发现,海面温度、波浪能量、海洋生产力和文石饱和度强烈影响底栖生物群落组成;忽视这些因素可能会使对钙化礁状态的预期产生偏差。将啃食生物量维持在相对较低的阈值(约10 - 20千克/公顷)以上,也可能防止向藻类主导状态的转变,为重建过度捕捞的食草动物种群提供一个切实可行的管理目标。在有人居住的岛屿上,生物物理关系并未脱节,这表明即使在长期受到干扰的珊瑚礁上,非生物影响仍是重要的宏观过程。然而,有人居住的珊瑚礁之间的空间自相关性很强,超过了非生物和啃食的影响,这表明对珊瑚礁底栖生物的自然限制已被未测量的人为影响所取代。非生物因素对珊瑚礁底栖生物群落有强烈影响的证据强调了它们在确定珊瑚礁管理和恢复的定量目标方面的重要性,这些目标在当地条件下是现实可行的。