학술논문

Recolonisation of Acropora hyacinthus following climate-induced coral bleaching on the Great Barrier Reef
Document Type
research-article
Source
Marine Ecology Progress Series, 2011 Oct 01. 438, 97-104.
Subject
Bleaching
Climate change
Coral reefs
Disturbance
Recovery
Resilience
Corals
Coral reefs
Bleaching
Climate change
Reefs
Mortality
Population structure
Population ecology
Population growth
Population dynamics
Language
English
ISSN
01718630
16161599
Abstract
Given projected increases in the frequency and/or severity of climatic disturbances, the persistence of corals may be more a function of their capacity for regeneration than resistance to such episodic disturbances. If so, climate change may favour those corals that regenerate fastest following acute disturbance. The tabular coral Acropora hyacinthus is fast-growing and typically dominates shallow wave-exposed habitats on the Great Barrier Reef, but it is extremely vulnerable to climate-induced coral bleaching and other disturbances (e.g. cyclones and outbreaks of crown-of-thorns starfish). The present study explores temporal changes in percentage cover and size structure of A. hyacinthus on reefs affected by the 2001−2002 bleaching event. Annual surveys conducted at 3 mid-shelf reefs from 2008 to 2010 revealed rapid, but very patchy, recovery of A. hyacinthus . Following extensive coral loss, local cover of A. hyacinthus increased due to growth of established colonies as well as addition and subsequent growth of new colonies. At one reef, recovery was mostly due to increased abundance of small colonies, assumed to have recruited since the bleaching, whereas recovery at the 2 other study reefs (A. hyacinthus populations may be due to either recolonisation or persistence, but that, either way, these corals are well suited to rapid recovery following acute disturbance.