Coral recovery may not herald the return of fishes on damaged coral reefs

被引:0
|
作者
David R. Bellwood
Andrew H. Baird
Martial Depczynski
Alonso González-Cabello
Andrew S. Hoey
Carine D. Lefèvre
Jennifer K. Tanner
机构
[1] James Cook University,School of Marine and Tropical Biology
[2] James Cook University,Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies
[3] UWA Oceans Institute,Australian Institute of Marine Science
[4] King Abdullah University of Science and Technology,Red Sea Research Center
来源
Oecologia | 2012年 / 170卷
关键词
Coral reefs; Resilience; Bleaching; Phase shifts; Habitat loss;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The dynamic nature of coral reefs offers a rare opportunity to examine the response of ecosystems to disruption due to climate change. In 1998, the Great Barrier Reef experienced widespread coral bleaching and mortality. As a result, cryptobenthic fish assemblages underwent a dramatic phase-shift. Thirteen years, and up to 96 fish generations later, the cryptobenthic fish assemblage has not returned to its pre-bleach configuration. This is despite coral abundances returning to, or exceeding, pre-bleach values. The post-bleach fish assemblage exhibits no evidence of recovery. If these short-lived fish species are a model for their longer-lived counterparts, they suggest that (1) the full effects of the 1998 bleaching event on long-lived fish populations have yet to be seen, (2) it may take decades, or more, before recovery or regeneration of these long-lived species will begin, and (3) fish assemblages may not recover to their previous composition despite the return of corals.
引用
收藏
页码:567 / 573
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Coral recovery may not herald the return of fishes on damaged coral reefs
    Bellwood, David R.
    Baird, Andrew H.
    Depczynski, Martial
    Gonzalez-Cabello, Alonso
    Hoey, Andrew S.
    Lefevre, Carine D.
    Tanner, Jennifer K.
    [J]. OECOLOGIA, 2012, 170 (02) : 567 - 573
  • [2] THE FISHES OF CORAL-REEFS
    DUFOUR, V
    PLANES, S
    DOHERTY, P
    [J]. RECHERCHE, 1995, 26 (277): : 640 - 647
  • [3] Coral reefs damaged by sunscreen ingredients
    不详
    [J]. MARINE POLLUTION BULLETIN, 2014, 80 (1-2) : 7 - 7
  • [4] RECOVERY AND RECOLONIZATION OF CORAL REEFS
    PEARSON, RG
    [J]. MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES, 1981, 4 (01) : 105 - 122
  • [5] Coral-algal competition on damaged reefs
    E. A. Titlyanov
    T. V. Titlyanova
    [J]. Russian Journal of Marine Biology, 2008, 34 : 199 - 219
  • [6] Coral-algal competition on damaged reefs
    Titlyanov, E. A.
    Titlyanova, T. V.
    [J]. RUSSIAN JOURNAL OF MARINE BIOLOGY, 2008, 34 (04) : 199 - 219
  • [7] CORAL TRANSPLANTATION - AN APPROACH TO THE REESTABLISHMENT OF DAMAGED REEFS
    AUBERSON, B
    [J]. KALIKASAN-THE PHILIPPINE JOURNAL OF BIOLOGY, 1982, 11 (01): : 158 - 172
  • [8] Intensive care heals damaged coral reefs
    Marks, Paul
    [J]. NEW SCIENTIST, 2006, 191 (2559) : 28 - 29
  • [9] Shelters and Their Use by Fishes on Fringing Coral Reefs
    Menard, Alexandre
    Turgeon, Katrine
    Roche, Dominique G.
    Binning, Sandra A.
    Kramer, Donald L.
    [J]. PLOS ONE, 2012, 7 (06):
  • [10] Another look at the evolution of fishes on coral reefs
    Santini, F.
    [J]. INTEGRATIVE AND COMPARATIVE BIOLOGY, 2017, 57 : E396 - E396