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  • Effects of Benthic Algae on the Replenishment of Corals and the Implications for the Resilience of Coral Reefs

    Author(s)
    Birrell, Chico L
    Mccook, Laurence J
    Willis, Bette L
    Diaz-Pulido, Guillermo A
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Diaz-Pulido, Guillermo
    Year published
    2008
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    The ecological resilience of coral reefs depends critically on the capacity of coral populations to re-establish in habitats dominated by macroalgae. Coral reefs globally are under rapidly increasing pressure from human activities, especially from climate change, with serious environmental, social and economic consequences. Coral mortality is usually followed by colonisation by benthic algae of various forms, so that algae dominate most degraded and disturbed reefs. The capacity of coral populations to re-establish in this algal-dominated environment will depend on direct and indirect impacts of the algae on the supply ...
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    The ecological resilience of coral reefs depends critically on the capacity of coral populations to re-establish in habitats dominated by macroalgae. Coral reefs globally are under rapidly increasing pressure from human activities, especially from climate change, with serious environmental, social and economic consequences. Coral mortality is usually followed by colonisation by benthic algae of various forms, so that algae dominate most degraded and disturbed reefs. The capacity of coral populations to re-establish in this algal-dominated environment will depend on direct and indirect impacts of the algae on the supply of coral larvae from remnant adults, on settlement of coral larvae and on the post-settlement survival and growth of juvenile corals. The effects of benthic algae on coral replenishment vary considerably but the thick mats or large seaweeds typical of degraded reefs have predominantly negative impacts. Some algae, mostly calcareous red algae, may enhance coral settlement on healthy reefs. Algal effects on coral replenishment include reduced fecundity and larval survival, pre-emption of space for settlement, abrasion or overgrowth of recruits, sloughing or dislodgement of recruits settled on crustose algae, and changes to habitat conditions. There is a serious lack of information about these effects, which are likely to cause bottlenecks in coral recovery and significantly reduce the resilience of coral reefs.
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    Journal Title
    Oceanography and Marine Biology: An Annual Review
    Volume
    46
    Publisher URI
    https://www.crcpress.com/Oceanography-and-Marine-Biology-An-Annual-Review-Volume-46/Gibson-Atkinson-Gordon/p/book/9781420065749
    Subject
    Oceanography not elsewhere classified
    Marine and estuarine ecology (incl. marine ichthyology)
    Phycology (incl. marine grasses)
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/38396
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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