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. 2014 Jul 1;9(7):e101204.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0101204. eCollection 2014.

Coral reef community composition in the context of disturbance history on the Great Barrier Reef, Australia

Affiliations

Coral reef community composition in the context of disturbance history on the Great Barrier Reef, Australia

Nicholas A J Graham et al. PLoS One. .

Abstract

Much research on coral reefs has documented differential declines in coral and associated organisms. In order to contextualise this general degradation, research on community composition is necessary in the context of varied disturbance histories and the biological processes and physical features thought to retard or promote recovery. We conducted a spatial assessment of coral reef communities across five reefs of the central Great Barrier Reef, Australia, with known disturbance histories, and assessed patterns of coral cover and community composition related to a range of other variables thought to be important for reef dynamics. Two of the reefs had not been extensively disturbed for at least 15 years prior to the surveys. Three of the reefs had been severely impacted by crown-of-thorns starfish outbreaks and coral bleaching approximately a decade before the surveys, from which only one of them was showing signs of recovery based on independent surveys. We incorporated wave exposure (sheltered and exposed) and reef zone (slope, crest and flat) into our design, providing a comprehensive assessment of the spatial patterns in community composition on these reefs. Categorising corals into life history groupings, we document major coral community differences in the unrecovered reefs, compared to the composition and covers found on the undisturbed reefs. The recovered reef, despite having similar coral cover, had a different community composition from the undisturbed reefs, which may indicate slow successional processes, or a different natural community dominance pattern due to hydrology and other oceanographic factors. The variables that best correlated with patterns in the coral community among sites included the density of juvenile corals, herbivore fish biomass, fish species richness and the cover of macroalgae. Given increasing impacts to the Great Barrier Reef, efforts to mitigate local stressors will be imperative to encouraging coral communities to persist into the future.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1. Location of studied reefs and historical patterns of coral cover through time.
a) Map of the surveyed reefs. The green dots are the undisturbed reefs, the red dots are the disturbed reefs that did not recover, and the blue dot is the disturbed reef that recovered. b) Coral cover (%) estimates from the 5 reefs from 1995 to 2009 providing the disturbance history context for the spatial data collected in this study. Data for Trunk reef are from Pratchett et al. , and for Wheeler, Davies, Rib and John Brewer reefs are from the AIMS Long Term Monitoring Program .
Figure 2
Figure 2. Variation in: a) coral cover (%), b) structural complexity, and c) coral genus richness among reefs.
Red bars are unrecovered reefs, blue bar is the recovered reef and green bars are undisturbed reefs. Bars represent means per site ±standard error. Horizontal lines represent homogeneous subsets from post hoc comparisons using the Tukey test.
Figure 3
Figure 3. Influence of zone and exposure on coral cover, richness and structural complexity among disturbance groupings.
Variation in: a) coral cover (%), b) structural complexity, and c) coral genus richness among disturbance category, reef zones and wave exposure levels. Bars represent means per site ± standard error.
Figure 4
Figure 4. Differences in coral community composition by life history strategy with disturbance, zone and exposure.
a) Non-metric multidimensional scaling analysis of coral group cover (%) based on life history categorisation. Colour and shape of symbols represent disturbance category, reef zone and wave exposure. Vectors represent the relative contribution of the coral groups to the observed variation among sites. b) Competitive coral cover (%) among disturbance category, reef zone and wave exposure. c) Non-competitive (weedy, stress-tolerant, generalist and other) coral cover (%) among disturbance category, reef zone and wave exposure. Bars represent means per site ± standard error.

References

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