月光如何塑造珊瑚礁上的环境、生命史和生态相互作用。

IF 3.4 Q2 BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Jeffrey S Shima, Craig W Osenberg, Suzanne H Alonzo, Erik G Noonburg, Stephen E Swearer
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引用次数: 2

摘要

月亮周期导致夜间亮度的变化。对于珊瑚礁生物的上层幼虫来说,夜间照明可能会产生广泛而不被重视的后果。在海上,夜幕降临的同时,中层生物也涌入了浅水区。包括捕食者(如灯笼鱼)和以浮游动物为食的珊瑚礁幼虫的猎物(浮游动物)。月光通常会抑制这种涌入,但月亮在时间和夜间亮度上的周期性可能会对垂直迁徙的捕食者和猎物产生不同的影响。主要的物种更替发生在日落时分的珊瑚礁上,白天活动的物种寻找庇护,夜间活动的物种出现狩猎。夜间活动的珊瑚礁捕食者的捕猎能力得益于月光。因此,夜间光照的变化可能会影响许多珊瑚礁生物的繁殖、幼虫发育和定居的时间。这种综合强调了珊瑚礁和邻近的远洋生态系统之间的营养联系的潜在重要性,这种联系是由中远洋生物的昼夜迁移和珊瑚礁幼虫的个体发生迁移所促进的。需要进行研究,以更好地了解月球周期对生命史策略的影响,以及光污染、浑浊和气候驱动的变化对夜间云量的潜在破坏性影响。这些未被重视的威胁可能会改变夜间照明模式,而夜间照明模式塑造了许多珊瑚礁生物的进化史,其对幼虫生存和种群补充的影响可能与气候变化引起的其他影响相媲美或超过。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
How moonlight shapes environments, life histories, and ecological interactions on coral reefs.

The lunar cycle drives variation in nocturnal brightness. For the epipelagic larvae of coral reef organisms, nocturnal illumination may have widespread and underappreciated consequences. At sea, the onset of darkness coincides with an influx of mesopelagic organisms to shallow water (i.e. 'diel vertical migrants') that include predators (e.g. lanternfishes) and prey (zooplankton) of zooplanktivorous coral reef larvae. Moonlight generally suppresses this influx, but lunar periodicity in the timing and intensity of nocturnal brightness may affect vertically migrating predators and prey differently. A major turnover of species occurs at sunset on the reef, with diurnal species seeking shelter and nocturnal species emerging to hunt. The hunting ability of nocturnal reef-based predators is aided by the light of the moon. Consequently, variation in nocturnal illumination is likely to shape the timing of reproduction, larval development, and settlement for many coral reef organisms. This synthesis underscores the potential importance of trophic linkages between coral reefs and adjacent pelagic ecosystems, facilitated by the diel migrations of mesopelagic organisms and the ontogenetic migrations of coral reef larvae. Research is needed to better understand the effects of lunar cycles on life-history strategies, and the potentially disruptive effects of light pollution, turbidity, and climate-driven changes to nocturnal cloud cover. These underappreciated threats may alter patterns of nocturnal illumination that have shaped the evolutionary history of many coral reef organisms, with consequences for larval survival and population replenishment that could rival or exceed other effects arising from climate change.

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CiteScore
7.70
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