不断变化的干扰机制、物质遗产和稳定反馈:珊瑚白化后,死亡的珊瑚骨骼会损害关键的恢复过程

IF 10.8 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION
Kai L. Kopecky, Sally J. Holbrook, Emalia Partlow, Madeline Cunningham, Russell J. Schmitt
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引用次数: 0

摘要

生态系统对扰动的反应取决于扰动的性质和留下的生态遗产,因此了解气候驱动的扰动机制变化如何改变生态系统的恢复力特性至关重要。对于珊瑚礁来说,最近严重的海洋热浪与历史上的干扰因素--强风暴--同时出现。风暴会杀死珊瑚并带走它们的骨骼,而热浪会漂白并杀死珊瑚,但会完整地留下它们的骨骼。在这里,我们探讨了死亡珊瑚骨架的物质遗产如何改变珊瑚礁复原力的两个关键生态过程:食草动物控制大型藻类(珊瑚的空间竞争者)的能力,以及新珊瑚群的补充。我们的研究结果以我们长期研究地点的一次重大白化事件为基础,揭示了结构复杂的死亡骨架的存在使草皮藻类的食草量减少了约 80%。对于大型藻类来说,较不喜欢(不好吃)的类群的食草量减少了40%,而较喜欢的类群的食草量只减少了约10%。这使得不可食用的大型藻类在两年内达到了约 45% 的覆盖率。相比之下,食草动物阻止了大型藻类在缺乏骨架的邻近珊瑚礁上生长。对难食性大型藻类的控制表明,1 年后达到的覆盖率(约 20%)使珊瑚的新陈代谢减少了 50%。骨架对幼体珊瑚生长的影响取决于相对于干扰的定居时间。如果珊瑚在白化后直接定居(在大型藻类定居之前),死骨架会使珊瑚群的生长提高 34%,但如果珊瑚在干扰发生一年后大型藻类大量繁殖后定居死骨架,这种益处就会丧失。这些发现强调了不断变化的干扰制度所遗留的物质如何通过破坏形成干扰后群落动态的关键营养和竞争相互作用来改变生态系统的恢复力特性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Changing disturbance regimes, material legacies, and stabilizing feedbacks: Dead coral skeletons impair key recovery processes following coral bleaching

Changing disturbance regimes, material legacies, and stabilizing feedbacks: Dead coral skeletons impair key recovery processes following coral bleaching

Changing disturbance regimes, material legacies, and stabilizing feedbacks: Dead coral skeletons impair key recovery processes following coral bleaching

Ecosystem responses to disturbance depend on the nature of the perturbation and the ecological legacies left behind, making it critical to understand how climate-driven changes in disturbance regimes modify resilience properties of ecosystems. For coral reefs, recent increases in severe marine heat waves now co-occur with powerful storms, the historic agent of disturbance. While storms kill coral and remove their skeletons, heat waves bleach and kill corals but leave their skeletons intact. Here, we explored how the material legacy of dead coral skeletons modifies two key ecological processes that underpin coral reef resilience: the ability of herbivores to control macroalgae (spatial competitors of corals), and the replenishment of new coral colonies. Our findings, grounded by a major bleaching event at our long-term study locale, revealed that the presence of structurally complex dead skeletons reduced grazing on turf algae by ~80%. For macroalgae, browsing was reduced by >40% on less preferred (unpalatable) taxa, but only by ~10% on more preferred taxa. This enabled unpalatable macroalgae to reach ~45% cover in 2 years. By contrast, herbivores prevented macroalgae from becoming established on adjacent reefs that lacked skeletons. Manipulation of unpalatable macroalgae revealed that the cover reached after 1 year (~20%) reduced recruitment of corals by 50%. The effect of skeletons on juvenile coral growth was contingent on the timing of settlement relative to the disturbance. If corals settled directly after bleaching (before macroalgae colonized), dead skeletons enhanced colony growth by 34%, but this benefit was lost if corals colonized dead skeletons a year after the disturbance once macroalgae had proliferated. These findings underscore how a material legacy from a changing disturbance regime can alter ecosystem resilience properties by disrupting key trophic and competitive interactions that shape post-disturbance community dynamics.

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来源期刊
Global Change Biology
Global Change Biology 环境科学-环境科学
CiteScore
21.50
自引率
5.20%
发文量
497
审稿时长
3.3 months
期刊介绍: Global Change Biology is an environmental change journal committed to shaping the future and addressing the world's most pressing challenges, including sustainability, climate change, environmental protection, food and water safety, and global health. Dedicated to fostering a profound understanding of the impacts of global change on biological systems and offering innovative solutions, the journal publishes a diverse range of content, including primary research articles, technical advances, research reviews, reports, opinions, perspectives, commentaries, and letters. Starting with the 2024 volume, Global Change Biology will transition to an online-only format, enhancing accessibility and contributing to the evolution of scholarly communication.
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