How much time can herbivore protection buy for coral reefs under realistic regimes of hurricanes and coral bleaching?
Authored by Peter J Mumby, Helen J Edwards, Ian A Elliott, C Mark Eakin, Akiyuki Irikawa, Joshua S Madin, Melanie McField, Jessica A Morgan, Woesik Robert van
Date Published: 2011
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2486.2010.02366.x
Sponsors:
United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
Australian Research Council (ARC)
United Kingdom Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Coral reefs have been more severely impacted by recent climate
instability than any other ecosystem on Earth. Corals tolerate a narrow
range of physical environmental stress, and increases in sea temperature
of just 1 degrees C over several weeks can result in mass coral
mortality, often exceeding 95\% of individuals over hundreds of square
kilometres. Even conservative climate models predict that mass coral
bleaching events could occur annually by 2050. Unfortunately, managers
of coral-reef resources have few options available to meet this
challenge. Here, we investigate the role that fisheries conservation
tools, including the designation of marine reserves, can play in
altering future trajectories of Caribbean coral reefs. We use an
individual-based model of the ecological dynamics to test the influence
of spatially realistic regimes of disturbance on coral populations. Two
major sources of disturbance, hurricanes and coral bleaching, are
simulated in contrasting regions of the Caribbean: Belize, Bonaire, and
the Bahamas. Simulations are extended to 2099 using the HadGEM1 climate
model. We find that coral populations can maintain themselves under all
levels of hurricane disturbance providing that grazing levels are high.
Regional differences in hurricane frequency are found to cause
strikingly different spatial patterns of reef health with greater
patchiness occurring in Belize, which has less frequent disturbance, than the Bahamas. The addition of coral bleaching led to a much more
homogenous reef state over the seascape. Moreover, in the presence of
bleaching, all reefs exhibited a decline in health over time, though
with substantial variation among regions. Although the protection of
herbivores does not prevent reef degradation it does delay rates of
coral loss even under the most severe thermal and hurricane regimes.
Thus, we can estimate the degree to which local conservation can help
buy time for reefs with values ranging between 18 years in the Bahamas
and over 50 years in Bonaire, compared with heavily fished systems.
Ultimately, we demonstrate that local conservation measures can benefit
reef ecosystem services but that their impact will vary spatially and
temporally. Recognizing where such management interventions will either
help or fail is an important step towards both achieving sustainable use
of coral-reef resources and maximizing resource management investments.
Tags
Conservation
Mortality
Model
Climate-change
Variability
Great-barrier-reef
Ocean
acidification
Us virgin-islands
Diadema-antillarum
Tropical cyclones