Coral reef recovery in a remote and large marine protected area is resilient to cascading trophic interactions

IF 4.9 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION
Jamie M. McDevitt-Irwin , Micaela Chapuis , Rachel Carlson , Mark Meekan , Melissa Palmisciano , Ronan Roche , Brett M. Taylor , Kristina L. Tietjen , Ceyenna Tillman , Fiorenza Micheli
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Abstract

Large marine protected areas (MPAs) will likely multiply worldwide to address accelerating biodiversity loss. Coral reefs are an especially at-risk ecosystem, but our understanding of whether and how large MPAs will benefit reef recovery from disturbances remains limited. Here, we evaluate how fishes influence coral reef recovery and if there are cascading trophic interactions in the fish community that influence recovery. We combine i) a meta-analysis of previous research evaluating how fishes affect coral reef succession, ii) field surveys of sharks, fishes, and benthic cover, and iii) a 2.5-year coral recruitment experiment of caged, uncaged, and partially caged settlement tiles in a remote and large MPA, in the Chagos Archipelago. In both our meta-analysis and field experiment, we found variable effects of fishes on coral recruitment with no overall significant effect, but strong control by fishes on the developing benthic communities, where fishes promote crustose coralline algae and reduce macroalgae. Within the Chagos, fishes had a positive effect on corals in protected microhabitats but a negative effect on exposed surfaces, leading to an overall neutral effect from fishes. Although mesopredatory fish abundance was negatively correlated with shark abundance, these top-down effects did not cascade down the food web through herbivores and corallivores to coral recruitment and benthic succession. Thus, our results suggest that within this large MPA, herbivores are important in limiting algae during recovery and there are compensatory responses to the loss of benthic feeding fishes and sharks, with implications for coral reef persistence in the face of global change.

一个偏远的大型海洋保护区的珊瑚礁恢复受到级联营养相互作用的影响
大型海洋保护区(MPA)可能会在全球范围内成倍增加,以应对生物多样性加速丧失的问题。珊瑚礁是一个特别濒危的生态系统,但我们对大型海洋保护区是否以及如何有利于珊瑚礁从干扰中恢复的了解仍然有限。在此,我们评估了鱼类如何影响珊瑚礁的恢复,以及鱼类群落中是否存在影响恢复的级联营养相互作用。我们结合了 i) 对以往评估鱼类如何影响珊瑚礁演替的研究进行的荟萃分析;ii) 对鲨鱼、鱼类和底栖生物覆盖进行的实地调查;iii) 在查戈斯群岛一个偏远的大型海洋保护区进行的为期 2.5 年的珊瑚招募实验,包括笼养、非笼养和部分笼养沉降瓦片。在荟萃分析和实地实验中,我们发现鱼类对珊瑚招募的影响各不相同,总体上没有显著影响,但鱼类对底栖生物群落的发展有很强的控制作用,在底栖生物群落中,鱼类促进甲壳珊瑚藻的生长,减少大型藻类的生长。在查戈斯群岛,鱼类对受保护微生境中的珊瑚有积极影响,但对暴露表面的珊瑚有消极影响,因此鱼类的总体影响是中性的。虽然中层食肉鱼类的丰度与鲨鱼的丰度呈负相关,但这些自上而下的影响并没有通过食草动物和珊瑚食肉动物在食物网中向下传递到珊瑚的增殖和底栖生物的演替。因此,我们的研究结果表明,在这个大型海洋保护区内,食草动物在恢复期间对藻类的限制很重要,而底栖食鱼类和鲨鱼的损失则会产生补偿反应,这对珊瑚礁在全球变化中的持续存在具有影响。
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来源期刊
Biological Conservation
Biological Conservation 环境科学-环境科学
CiteScore
10.20
自引率
3.40%
发文量
295
审稿时长
61 days
期刊介绍: Biological Conservation is an international leading journal in the discipline of conservation biology. The journal publishes articles spanning a diverse range of fields that contribute to the biological, sociological, and economic dimensions of conservation and natural resource management. The primary aim of Biological Conservation is the publication of high-quality papers that advance the science and practice of conservation, or which demonstrate the application of conservation principles for natural resource management and policy. Therefore it will be of interest to a broad international readership.
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