School of Life and Environmental Sciences, the University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia.
School of Life and Environmental Sciences, the University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia.
Sci Total Environ. 2024 Jun 20;930:172691. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.172691. Epub 2024 Apr 23.
The coral predators, crown-of-thorns starfish (COTS, Acanthaster spp.) remain a major cause of extensive and widespread coral loss in Indo-Pacific coral reefs. With increased phylogenetic understanding of these seastars, at least five species appear to be present across different regions. We compare the feeding ecology of these species. Where acroporid corals are prevalent, Acanthaster spp. often exhibit a preference for these corals, with Porites being least preferred, as seen in most species including Acanthaster planci in the northern Indian Ocean and Acanthaster cf. solaris in the west Pacific. In the eastern Pacific, where Acropora is largely absent, Acanthaster cf. ellisii prey on a range of coral species, including Porites. Coral predation by COTS is influenced by several factors including food availability, coral nutritional value, protective crustaceans and coral defenses, with differences in feeding ecology and behaviour emerging across the different COTS species. Feeding behaviour of COTS can act to increase coral species richness by reducing the dominance of fast-growing species. In outbreaking populations, COTS impacts reef systems by reducing live coral cover, eroding reef complexity and causing shifts in reef trophic structure. Where data are available, we synthesise and contrast the feeding preferences and foraging behaviour of Acanthaster species, and their impact on coral assemblages across the different species and regions. For areas where focal predation on Acropora occurs, also the fastest growing coral with the greatest recovery potential following mass mortality events, the combination of climate change and COTS outbreaks presents an imminent threat to coral reefs. This is exacerbated by the dietary flexibility of Acanthaster species. The impacts of heatwaves, COTS and other stressors are creating a negative feedback loop accelerating coral reef decline.
珊瑚捕食者——棘冠海星(COTS,Acanthaster spp.)仍然是印度洋-太平洋珊瑚礁广泛和广泛珊瑚丧失的主要原因。随着对这些海星的系统发育理解的增加,至少有五个物种似乎存在于不同的地区。我们比较了这些物种的摄食生态学。在鹿角珊瑚占优势的地方,棘冠海星通常对这些珊瑚表现出偏好,而多孔螅则是最不受欢迎的,这在包括北印度洋的棘冠海星 Acanthaster planci 和西太平洋的棘冠海星 cf. solaris 在内的大多数物种中都可以看到。在东太平洋,鹿角珊瑚基本上不存在,棘冠海星 cf. ellisii 捕食多种珊瑚物种,包括多孔螅。棘冠海星对珊瑚的捕食受到多种因素的影响,包括食物供应、珊瑚营养价值、有保护作用的甲壳类动物和珊瑚防御,不同的棘冠海星物种在摄食生态学和行为上存在差异。棘冠海星的摄食行为可以通过减少快速生长物种的优势来增加珊瑚物种的丰富度。在爆发性种群中,棘冠海星通过降低活珊瑚覆盖率、侵蚀珊瑚礁复杂性和导致珊瑚礁营养结构变化来影响珊瑚礁系统。在有数据的情况下,我们综合和对比了不同物种和地区的棘冠海星的摄食偏好和觅食行为,以及它们对珊瑚组合的影响。对于焦点捕食鹿角珊瑚的地区,也是在大规模死亡事件后具有最大恢复潜力的生长最快的珊瑚,气候变化和棘冠海星爆发的结合对珊瑚礁构成了迫在眉睫的威胁。棘冠海星物种的饮食灵活性加剧了这种情况。热浪、棘冠海星和其他胁迫因素的影响正在形成一个负反馈循环,加速珊瑚礁的衰退。