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Coral/algal Reefs II What forces maintain reef diversity? Planet Earth video Ecological functional groups A larger scale view: reef building process Atoll structure Habitat diversity within an atoll Niche dimensions enhancing reef fish diversity • Defensive tactics • Feeding – Food type – Food location – Timing of foraging • Life-history and social structure Physical defenses: Spines of Porcupine fish Physical defenses: misdirection, Butterfly fish Territoriality: Pomacentrus Poisons: Purple trunk fish, lionfish Feeding: >50% feed on other fish • Variation by size, location, timing Feeding: coral (Triggerfish) Feeding: “inverts” by probing (file fish) Feeding: marine worms (butterfly fish) Feeding: plankton (purple queen) Feeding: algae (surgeon fish) Feeding: other fish/ cleaning symbiosis –Pacific Cleaner Wrasse –Moray Eel –Saber Tooth Blenny External factors influencing diversity • Proximity to mangrove nurseries – Mumby et al. 2004, Nature 427:533 – Compare fish biomass from reefs near mangroves and where mangroves scarce Species Scarce mangrove Rich mangrove H. sciurus 1,205 33,349 H. pumieri 5,174 16,280 Haemulidae 11,636 67,370 739 6,192 L. apodus How can coral/algal reefs support so many species? • “Bottom-up” hypotheses – High degree of nutrient recycling (symbiotic mutualism) promotes corals – Coral diversity promotes associated species – “Biotic multiplier effect” • “Top-down” hypotheses – Predation rates/disturbance reduce competition – Patchy environments with variable colonization – Priority advantage (inhibition model) Utilitarian justification for reef conservation • Therapeutic compounds from marine species – Anti-virals from sponges, seagrass – Anti-tumor compounds from tunicate, dogfish, bryozoan, sea hares, cyanobacteria, sponge – Compounds to promote bone grafts from stony corals • Tourism • Food • Impact on global climate, carbon exchange • Models for scientific study Processes important in reef dynamics – what maintains the reef structure? • Symbiosis (and dissolution of associations) • Competition • Predation and grazing • Disturbance & recovery Competitive dynamics • Exploitation competition (for light) – Upright, branching corals can shade massive corals – Encrusting algae can spread over corals • Interference competition (for space) – External digestion by some corals – “Sweeper” tentacles for some species • Hierarchy of competitive dominance – Algae easily overgrow most corals – Among corals Pocillopora is nastiest Dynamics of predation on coral reef species • Coral-feeding fish are present but usually not devastating – Territorial damselfish create safe zones (up to 60% of surface area) – Coral-feeders have their own predators • Starfish, such as “Crown-of-Thorns” can be problematic – Population “outbreaks” can damage living corals Dynamics of grazing on algal reef species • Urchins are major • • • consumers (e.g., Diadema antillarum) Grazing by herbivorous fish can be specialized on algae (more impact than fish feeding on corals) Grazing can suppress competitively dominant algae Indirect effects can become important