Highly variable taxa-specific coral bleaching responses to thermal stresses

Autor: Julius Pagu, Emily S. Darling, Gabriel Grimsditch, Stacy D. Jupiter, Stephanie D’agata, Tim R. McClanahan, Sangeeta Mangubhai, Vardhan Patankar, George Shedrawi, Shaun K. Wilson, Austin T. Humphries, Julien Leblond, Nyawira A. Muthiga, Rohan Arthur, Mireille Guillaume, Joseph Maina, Ali M. Ussi
Přispěvatelé: Laboratoire Insulaire du Vivant et de l'Environnement (LIVE), Université de la Nouvelle-Calédonie (UNC), Unité de Catalyse et Chimie du Solide - UMR 8181 (UCCS), Université d'Artois (UA)-Centrale Lille-Institut de Chimie du CNRS (INC)-Université de Lille-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
Rok vydání: 2020
Předmět:
Zdroj: Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC
instname
Marine Ecology Progress Series
Marine Ecology Progress Series, 2020, 648, pp.135-151. ⟨10.3354/meps13402⟩
ISSN: 1616-1599
0171-8630
Popis: Este artículo contiene 17 páginas, 8 figuras, 5 tablas.
Complex histories of chronic and acute sea surface temperature (SST) stresses are expected to trigger taxon- and location-specific responses that will ultimately lead to novel coral communities. The 2016 El Niño-Southern Oscillation provided an opportunity to examine largescale and recent environmental histories on emerging patterns in 226 coral communities distributed across 12 countries from East Africa to Fiji. Six main coral communities were identified that largely varied across a gradient of Acropora to massive Porites dominance. Bleaching intensity was taxon-specific and was associated with complex interactions among the 20 environmental variables that we examined. Coral community structure was better aligned with the historical temperature patterns between 1985 and 2015 than the 2016 extreme temperature event. Additionally, bleaching responses observed during 2016 differed from historical reports during past warm years. Consequently, coral communities present in 2016 are likely to have been reorganized by both long-term community change and acclimation mechanisms. For example, less disturbed sites with cooler baseline temperatures, higher mean historical SST background variability, and infrequent extreme warm temperature stresses were associated with Acropora-dominated communities, while more disturbed sites with lower historical SST background variability and frequent acute warm stress were dominated by stress-resistant massive Porites corals. Overall, the combination of taxon-specific responses, community-level reorganization over time, geographic variation, and multiple environmental stressors suggest complex responses and a diversity of future coral communities that can help contextualize management priorities and activities.
T.R.M. and N.A.M. received support from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, and the Sustainable Poverty Alleviation from Coastal Ecosystem Services (SPACES) project, number NE-K010484-1. E.S.D. was supported by an NSERC Banting Postdoctoral Fellowship and the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. Data collection in the Solomon Islands was supported by the Wallace Research Foundation, and the Waitt Foundation supported data collection in Fiji. Maldives data collection was supported by IUCN and USAID. M.M.M.G. received support from the French National Research Agency under the STORISK project (no. ANR-15-CE03- 0003). Data collection in Zanzibar was partly supported by the NORHED project coordinated by the State University of Zanzibar (SUZA). The Tiffany & Co. Foundation and the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation supported data collection at sites in the western Indian Ocean. V.J.P. received support from the DST-INSPIRE Faculty Programme, and Z. Tyabji and S. Chandrasekhar assisted V.J.P. with data collection in the Andaman Islands. R.A. received funding support from the Pew Marine Fellowship and an Intramural Project from the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC-201330E062). S.A.K. was funded by the VILLUM Foundation (grant no. 10114). A.T.H. received funding from the Carnegie Corporation of New York. Indonesia data collection was supported by John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and Margaret A. Cargill Philanthropies. The following people assisted with data collection: A. Baird, A. Halford, S. Keith, C. Miternique, E. Montocchio, C. Muhando, J. Ndagala, and N. Summers.
Databáze: OpenAIRE