Predicting coral metapopulation decline in a changing thermal environment

被引:0
|
作者
Daniel M. Holstein
Tyler B. Smith
Ruben van Hooidonk
Claire B. Paris
机构
[1] Louisiana State University,Department of Oceanography and Coastal Sciences, College of the Coast and Environment
[2] University of the Virgin Islands,Center for Marine and Environmental Studies
[3] Cooperative Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Studies,Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory
[4] Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science,Department of Ocean Sciences
[5] National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,undefined
[6] University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science,undefined
来源
Coral Reefs | 2022年 / 41卷
关键词
Metapopulations; Coral reefs; Extinction; Persistence; Bleaching; Connectivity;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Thermal stress is expected to compromise the persistence of tropical corals throughout their biogeographic ranges, making many reefs inhospitable to corals by the end of the century. We integrated models of local predictions of thermal stress throughout the coming century, coral larval dispersal, and the persistence of a coral’s metapopulation(s) in the Caribbean to investigate broad trends in metapopulation fragmentation and decline. As coral reef patches become inhospitable throughout the next century, the metapopulation of Orbicella annularis is predicted to fragment, with sub-networks centered around highly connected patches and thermal refuges. Some of these are predicted to include the reefs of Colombia, Panama, Honduras, Guatemala, Belize, Southern and Northern Cuba, Haiti, and the Bahamas. Unknown coral population demographic parameters, such as lifetime egg production and stock-recruitment rates, limit the model’s predictions; however, a sensitivity analysis demonstrates that broadscale patterns of fragmentation and metapopulation collapse before the end of the century are consistent across a range of potential parameterizations. Despite dire predictions, the model highlights the potential value in protecting and restoring coral populations at strategic locations that are highly connected and/or influential to persistence. Coordinated conservation activities that support local resilience at low coral cover have the potential to stave off metapopulation collapse for decades, buying valuable time. Thermal refuges are linchpins of metapopulation persistence during moderate thermal stress, and targeted conservation or restoration that supports connectivity between these refuges by enhancing local population growth or sexual propagation may be critically important to species conservation on coral reefs.
引用
收藏
页码:961 / 972
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Evidence of sweepstakes reproductive success in a broadcast-spawning coral and its implications for coral metapopulation persistence
    Barfield, Sarah
    Davies, Sarah W.
    Matz, Mikhail V.
    MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, 2023, 32 (03) : 696 - 702
  • [32] Effect of Air Velocity on Thermal Comfort under Thermal Environment Ramp Changing
    嵇赟喆
    涂光备
    孙琳
    Transactions of Tianjin University, 2004, (04) : 291 - 296
  • [33] Effect of air velocity on thermal comfort under thermal environment ramp changing
    Ji, Yun-Zhe
    Tu, Guang-Bei
    Sun, Lin
    Transactions of Tianjin University, 2004, 10 (04) : 291 - 296
  • [34] Extreme temperature events will drive coral decline in the Coral Triangle
    McManus, Lisa C.
    Vasconcelos, Vitor V.
    Levin, Simon A.
    Thompson, Diane M.
    Kleypas, Joan A.
    Castruccio, Frederic S.
    Curchitser, Enrique N.
    Watson, James R.
    GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2020, 26 (04) : 2120 - 2133
  • [35] Capercaillie in the Alps: genetic evidence of metapopulation structure and population decline
    Segelbacher, G
    Storch, I
    MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, 2002, 11 (09) : 1669 - 1677
  • [36] Analytical solution of metapopulation dynamics in a stochastic environment
    Morita, Satoru
    Yoshimura, Jin
    PHYSICAL REVIEW E, 2012, 86 (04):
  • [37] The changing health of coral reefs
    Barber, RT
    Hilting, AK
    Hayes, ML
    HUMAN AND ECOLOGICAL RISK ASSESSMENT, 2001, 7 (05): : 1255 - 1270
  • [38] TOOTH STRUCTURAL DEGRADATION DUE TO A CHANGING ORAL THERMAL ENVIRONMENT
    LLOYD, BA
    DESPAIN, RR
    BROWN, WS
    JOURNAL OF DENTAL RESEARCH, 1973, 52 : 221 - &
  • [39] Human pathogen contributes to coral decline
    McCurry-Schmidt, Madeline
    FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT, 2011, 9 (08) : 429 - 429
  • [40] The continuing decline of coral reefs in Bahrain
    Burt, John A.
    Al-Khalifa, Khalifa
    Khalaf, Ebtesam
    AlShuwaikh, Bassem
    Abdulwahab, Ahmed
    MARINE POLLUTION BULLETIN, 2013, 72 (02) : 357 - 363