Friend of the dead: Zoanthids enhance the persistence of dead coral reef framework under high consumer pressure

IF 2.7 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 ECOLOGY
Ecosphere Pub Date : 2024-09-11 DOI:10.1002/ecs2.4940
Patrick H. Saldaña, Natalie L. Lang, Andrew H. Altieri
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Abstract

Consumers can play critical roles in ecosystem resilience by modifying community resistance and recovery rates. In coral reefs, grazers can increase reef resilience by controlling algae and maintaining open space for coral recruitment, but can also erode the reef framework critical for coral recovery. Here we examine the context-dependent effects of herbivores on reef persistence in Caribbean Panamá. Using a series of lab and field experiments, we found that the erosional effects of the herbivorous reef urchin (Echinometra viridis) were 2 orders of magnitude greater on dead corals than live corals, and surveys across multiple similarly overfished reefs revealed a positive relationship between urchin densities and percent cover of bare dead coral with urchin densities exceeding 150 m−2 in some reefs. However, we observed that a mat-forming zoanthid (Zoanthus pulchellus), found exclusively on dead corals, had an inverse spatial relationship with urchins. Through a series of field experiments, we found that zoanthid overgrowth repelled urchins, increased dead coral persistence, and decreased erosion of dead corals making up the reef framework by more than 50% over a 22-month period. Our findings reveal that zoanthids can provide associational refuge to dead corals by enhancing their persistence under high urchin grazing pressure. We suggest that secondary space-holders, such as zoanthids, may play increasingly important functional roles in degraded reef systems by shielding coral skeletons from external bioeroders. Moreover, the Stress Gradient Hypothesis, which predicts that the importance of positive interactions such as associational refuges increases with consumer pressure, extends to dead foundation species such as coral skeletons crucial for ecosystem recovery.

Abstract Image

死亡之友在高消费压力下,藻类能增强死珊瑚礁框架的持久性
食草动物可以改变群落的抵抗力和恢复速度,从而在生态系统恢复能力方面发挥关键作用。在珊瑚礁中,食草动物可以通过控制藻类和保持珊瑚繁殖的开放空间来提高珊瑚礁的恢复力,但也会侵蚀对珊瑚恢复至关重要的珊瑚礁框架。在此,我们研究了食草动物对加勒比海巴拿马地区珊瑚礁持久性的影响。通过一系列实验室和野外实验,我们发现食草性珊瑚海胆(Echinometra viridis)对死珊瑚的侵蚀作用比活珊瑚大两个数量级,对多个类似的过度捕捞珊瑚礁的调查显示,海胆密度与裸露死珊瑚覆盖率之间存在正相关关系,在一些珊瑚礁中,海胆密度超过 150 m-2。然而,我们观察到,一种只在死珊瑚上发现的垫状动物(Zoanthus pulchellus)与海胆的空间关系是反向的。通过一系列现场实验,我们发现,在 22 个月的时间里,藻黄囊藻的过度生长能够驱赶海胆,增加死珊瑚的持久性,并将构成珊瑚礁框架的死珊瑚的侵蚀减少 50%以上。我们的研究结果表明,在海胆的高度捕食压力下,动物黄龙可以通过提高死珊瑚的持久性为它们提供联合庇护。我们认为,在退化的珊瑚礁系统中,动物纲等次要空间持有者通过保护珊瑚骨骼免受外部生物侵蚀,可能会发挥越来越重要的功能作用。此外,"压力梯度假说"(Stress Gradient Hypothesis)预言,随着消费压力的增加,积极互动(如联合庇护所)的重要性也会增加,该假说也适用于对生态系统恢复至关重要的珊瑚骨架等死亡基础物种。
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来源期刊
Ecosphere
Ecosphere ECOLOGY-
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
3.70%
发文量
378
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊介绍: The scope of Ecosphere is as broad as the science of ecology itself. The journal welcomes submissions from all sub-disciplines of ecological science, as well as interdisciplinary studies relating to ecology. The journal''s goal is to provide a rapid-publication, online-only, open-access alternative to ESA''s other journals, while maintaining the rigorous standards of peer review for which ESA publications are renowned.
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