Decadal trends in a coral community and evidence of changed disturbance regime
Authored by M Wakeford, T J Done, C R Johnson
Date Published: 2008
DOI: 10.1007/s00338-007-0284-0
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
R
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
A 23 year data set (1981-2003 inclusive) and the spatially explicit
individual-based model ``Compete (c){''} were used to investigate the
implications of changing disturbance frequency on cover and taxonomic
composition of a shallow coral community at Lizard Island, Australia.
Near-vertical in situ stereo-photography was used to estimate rates of
coral growth, mortality, recruitment and outcomes of pair-wise
competitive interactions for 17 physiognomic groups of hard and soft
corals. These data were used to parameterise the model, and to quantify
impacts of three acute disturbance events that caused significant coral
mortality: 1982-a combination of coral bleaching and Crown-of-Thorns
starfish; 1990-cyclone waves; and 1996-Crown-of-Thorns starfish.
Predicted coral community trajectories were not sensitive to the
outcomes of competitive interactions (probably because average coral
cover was only 32\% and there was strong vertical separation among
established corals) or to major changes in recruitment rates. The model
trajectory of coral cover matched the observed trajectory accurately
until the 1996 disturbance, but only if all coral mortality was confined
to the 3 years of acute disturbance. Beyond that date (1997-2003), when
the observed community failed to recover, it was necessary to introduce
annual chronic background mortality to obtain a good match between
modelled and observed coral cover. This qualitative switch in the model
may reflect actual loss of resilience in the real community. Simulated
over a century, an 8 year disturbance frequency most closely reproduced
the mean community composition observed in the field prior to major
disturbance events. Shorter intervals between disturbances led to
reduced presence of the dominant hard coral groups, and a gradual
increase in the slow growing, more resilient soft corals, while longer
intervals (up to 16 years) resulted in monopolization by the fastest
growing table coral, Acropora hyacinthus.
Tags
Dynamics
resilience
patterns
Climate-change
Great-barrier-reef
Phase-shifts
Degradation
Predictions
Scleractinian corals
Acanthaster-planci