Characterizing the ecological trade-offs throughout the early ontogeny of coral recruitment
Authored by Peter J Mumby, Yves-Marie Bozec, Christopher Doropoulos, George Roff, Mirta Zupan, Johanna Werminghausen
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1890/15-0668.1
Sponsors:
United Kingdom Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Drivers of recruitment in sessile marine organisms are often poorly
understood, due to the rapidly changing requirements experienced during
early ontogeny. The complex suite of physical, biological, and
ecological interactions beginning at larval settlement involves a series
of trade-offs that influence recruitment success. For example, while
cryptic settlement within complex microhabitats is a commonly observed
phenomenon in sessile marine organisms, it is unclear whether trade-offs
between competition in cryptic refuges and predation on exposed surfaces
leads to higher recruitment.
To explore the trade-offs during the early ontogeny of scleractinian
corals, we combined field observations with laboratory and field
experiments to develop a mechanistic understanding of coral recruitment
success. Multiple experiments conducted over 15 months in Palau
(Micronesia) allowed a mechanistic approach to study the individual
factors involved in recruitment: settlement behavior, growth, competition, and predation, as functions of microhabitat and ontogeny.
We finally developed and tested a predictive recruitment model with the
broader aim of testing whether our empirical insights explained patterns
of coral recruitment and quantifying the relative importance of each
trade-off.
Coral settlement was higher in crevices than exposed microhabitats, but
post-settlement bottlenecks differed markedly in the presence (uncaged)
and absence (caged) of predators. Incidental predation by herbivores on
exposed surfaces at early post-settlement (<3 mm) stages and targeted
predation by corallivores at late post-settlement (3-10 mm) stages
exceeded competition in crevices as major drivers of mortality. In
contrast, when fish were excluded, competition with macroalgae and
heterotrophic invertebrates intensified mortality, particularly in
crevices. As a result, post-settlement trade-offs were reversed, and
recruitment was more than twofold higher on exposed surfaces than
crevices. Once post-settlement bottlenecks were overcome, survival was
higher on exposed surfaces regardless of fish exclusion. However, maximum recruitment occurred in crevices of uncaged treatments, being
ninefold higher than caged treatments. Overall, we characterize
recruitment success throughout the earliest life-history stages of
corals and uncover some intriguing trade-offs between growth, competition and predation, highlighting how these change and even
reverse during ontogeny and under alternate disturbance regimes.
Tags
Climate-change
Early postsettlement survival
Benthic marine-invertebrates
Scleractinian coral
Pocillopora-damicornis
Community
organization
Larval metamorphosis
Intertidal community
Ocean
acidification
French-polynesia