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Characterizing the ecological trade‐offs throughout the early ontogeny of coral recruitment

Authors :
Christopher Doropoulos
Peter J. Mumby
Yves-Marie Bozec
George Roff
Johanna Werminghausen
Mirta Zupan
Source :
Ecological Monographs. 86:20-44
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Wiley, 2016.

Abstract

Drivers of recruitment in sessile marine organisms are often poorly understood, due to the rapidly changing requirements experienced during early ontogeny. The complex suite of physical, biological, and ecological interactions beginning at larval settlement involves a series of trade-offs that influence recruitment success. For example, while cryptic settlement within complex microhabitats is a commonly observed phenomenon in sessile marine organisms, it is unclear whether trade-offs between competition in cryptic refuges and predation on exposed surfaces leads to higher recruitment.To explore the trade-offs during the early ontogeny of scleractinian corals, we combined field observations with laboratory and field experiments to develop a mechanistic understanding of coral recruitment success. Multiple experiments conducted over 15 months in Palau (Micronesia) allowed a mechanistic approach to study the individual factors involved in recruitment: settlement behavior, growth, competition, and predation, as functions of microhabitat and ontogeny. We finally developed and tested a predictive recruitment model with the broader aim of testing whether our empirical insights explained patterns of coral recruitment and quantifying the relative importance of each trade-off.Coral settlement was higher in crevices than exposed microhabitats, but post-settlement bottlenecks differed markedly in the presence (uncaged) and absence (caged) of predators. Incidental predation by herbivores on exposed surfaces at early post-settlement (

Details

ISSN :
15577015 and 00129615
Volume :
86
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Ecological Monographs
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........71feb9dca11a6cb80161e3f13b38a367
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1890/15-0668.1