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  • Doom and Boom on a Resilient Reef: Climate Change, Algal Overgrowth and Coral Recovery

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    Author(s)
    Diaz-Pulido, Guillermo
    McCook, Laurence J
    Dove, Sophie
    Berkelmans, Ray
    Roff, George
    Kline, David I
    Weeks, Scarla
    Evans, Richard D
    Williamson, David H
    Hoegh-Guldberg, Ove
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Diaz-Pulido, Guillermo
    Year published
    2009
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Background: Coral reefs around the world are experiencing large-scale degradation, largely due to global climate change, overfishing, diseases and eutrophication. Climate change models suggest increasing frequency and severity of warminginduced coral bleaching events, with consequent increases in coral mortality and algal overgrowth. Critically, the recovery of damaged reefs will depend on the reversibility of seaweed blooms, generally considered to depend on grazing of the seaweed, and replenishment of corals by larvae that successfully recruit to damaged reefs. These processes usually take years to decades to bring a ...
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    Background: Coral reefs around the world are experiencing large-scale degradation, largely due to global climate change, overfishing, diseases and eutrophication. Climate change models suggest increasing frequency and severity of warminginduced coral bleaching events, with consequent increases in coral mortality and algal overgrowth. Critically, the recovery of damaged reefs will depend on the reversibility of seaweed blooms, generally considered to depend on grazing of the seaweed, and replenishment of corals by larvae that successfully recruit to damaged reefs. These processes usually take years to decades to bring a reef back to coral dominance. Methodology/Principal Findings: In 2006, mass bleaching of corals on inshore reefs of the Great Barrier Reef caused high coral mortality. Here we show that this coral mortality was followed by an unprecedented bloom of a single species of unpalatable seaweed (Lobophora variegata), colonizing dead coral skeletons, but that corals on these reefs recovered dramatically, in less than a year. Unexpectedly, this rapid reversal did not involve reestablishment of corals by recruitment of coral larvae, as often assumed, but depended on several ecological mechanisms previously underestimated. Conclusions/Significance: These mechanisms of ecological recovery included rapid regeneration rates of remnant coral tissue, very high competitive ability of the corals allowing them to out-compete the seaweed, a natural seasonal decline in the particular species of dominant seaweed, and an effective marine protected area system. Our study provides a key example of the doom and boom of a highly resilient reef, and new insights into the variability and mechanisms of reef resilience under rapid climate change.
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    Journal Title
    PloS One
    Volume
    4
    Issue
    4
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0005239
    Copyright Statement
    © 2009 Diaz-Pulido et al. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License CCAL. (http://www.plos.org/journals/license.html)
    Subject
    Ecological impacts of climate change and ecological adaptation
    Ecological physiology
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/33434
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    • Journal articles

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