Spatial variation in background mortality among dominant coral taxa on Australia's Great Barrier Reef.

Even in the absence of major disturbances (e.g., cyclones, bleaching), corals are consistently subject to high levels of background mortality, which undermines individual fitness and resilience of coral colonies. Partial mortality may impact coral response to climate change by reducing colony abilit...

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Main Authors: Chiara Pisapia, Morgan S Pratchett
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4069195?pdf=render
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author Chiara Pisapia
Morgan S Pratchett
author_facet Chiara Pisapia
Morgan S Pratchett
author_sort Chiara Pisapia
collection DOAJ
description Even in the absence of major disturbances (e.g., cyclones, bleaching), corals are consistently subject to high levels of background mortality, which undermines individual fitness and resilience of coral colonies. Partial mortality may impact coral response to climate change by reducing colony ability to recover between major acute stressors. This study quantified proportion of injured versus uninjured colonies (the prevalence of injuries) and instantaneous measures of areal extent of injuries across individual colonies (the severity of injuries), in four common coral species along the Great Barrier Reef in Australia: massive Porites, encrusting Montipora, Acropora hyacinthus and Pocillopora damicornis. A total of 2,276 adult colonies were surveyed three latitudinal sectors, nine reefs and 27 sites along 1000 km2 on the Great Barrier Reef. The prevalence of injuries was very high, especially for Porites spp (91%) and Montipora encrusting (85%) and varied significantly, but most lay at small spatial scales (e.g., among colonies positioned <10-m apart). Similarly, severity of background partial mortality was surprisingly high (between 5% and 21%) but varied greatly among colonies within the same site and habitat. This study suggests that intraspecific variation in partial mortality between adjacent colonies may be more important than variation between colonies in different latitudinal sectors or reefs. Differences in the prevalence and severity of background partial mortality have significant ramifications for coral capacity to cope with increasing acute disturbances, such as climate-induced coral bleaching. These data are important for understanding coral responses to increasing stressors, and in particular for predicting their capacity to recover between subsequent disturbances.
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spelling doaj.art-e81d9ebb7d764938963cca99428fafea2022-12-22T01:53:41ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0196e10096910.1371/journal.pone.0100969Spatial variation in background mortality among dominant coral taxa on Australia's Great Barrier Reef.Chiara PisapiaMorgan S PratchettEven in the absence of major disturbances (e.g., cyclones, bleaching), corals are consistently subject to high levels of background mortality, which undermines individual fitness and resilience of coral colonies. Partial mortality may impact coral response to climate change by reducing colony ability to recover between major acute stressors. This study quantified proportion of injured versus uninjured colonies (the prevalence of injuries) and instantaneous measures of areal extent of injuries across individual colonies (the severity of injuries), in four common coral species along the Great Barrier Reef in Australia: massive Porites, encrusting Montipora, Acropora hyacinthus and Pocillopora damicornis. A total of 2,276 adult colonies were surveyed three latitudinal sectors, nine reefs and 27 sites along 1000 km2 on the Great Barrier Reef. The prevalence of injuries was very high, especially for Porites spp (91%) and Montipora encrusting (85%) and varied significantly, but most lay at small spatial scales (e.g., among colonies positioned <10-m apart). Similarly, severity of background partial mortality was surprisingly high (between 5% and 21%) but varied greatly among colonies within the same site and habitat. This study suggests that intraspecific variation in partial mortality between adjacent colonies may be more important than variation between colonies in different latitudinal sectors or reefs. Differences in the prevalence and severity of background partial mortality have significant ramifications for coral capacity to cope with increasing acute disturbances, such as climate-induced coral bleaching. These data are important for understanding coral responses to increasing stressors, and in particular for predicting their capacity to recover between subsequent disturbances.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4069195?pdf=render
spellingShingle Chiara Pisapia
Morgan S Pratchett
Spatial variation in background mortality among dominant coral taxa on Australia's Great Barrier Reef.
PLoS ONE
title Spatial variation in background mortality among dominant coral taxa on Australia's Great Barrier Reef.
title_full Spatial variation in background mortality among dominant coral taxa on Australia's Great Barrier Reef.
title_fullStr Spatial variation in background mortality among dominant coral taxa on Australia's Great Barrier Reef.
title_full_unstemmed Spatial variation in background mortality among dominant coral taxa on Australia's Great Barrier Reef.
title_short Spatial variation in background mortality among dominant coral taxa on Australia's Great Barrier Reef.
title_sort spatial variation in background mortality among dominant coral taxa on australia s great barrier reef
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4069195?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT chiarapisapia spatialvariationinbackgroundmortalityamongdominantcoraltaxaonaustraliasgreatbarrierreef
AT morganspratchett spatialvariationinbackgroundmortalityamongdominantcoraltaxaonaustraliasgreatbarrierreef