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Coral/algal Reefs IV Variation and Alternative States Variation in Florida Keys corals, 2005 Brandt, M. E. 2009. The effect of species and colony size on the bleaching response of reef-building corals in the Florida Keys during the 2005 mass bleaching event. Coral Reefs 28:911-924. • Background – Summer & fall, 2005 – high SST in ne Caribbean – Mass bleaching documented • Methods – Monitor corals for 191 colonies in permanent quadrats Bleaching was correlated with heating Bleaching prevalence varied among spp Bleaching incidence varied with colony size Why and what’s next? • Symbiont “clades” vary genetically – Corals can switch – Symbiodinium communities can vary across environmental gradients – Degree of flexibility is debated • Hosts (corals) also vary – Different fluorescent proteins for protection – Different abilities in heterotrophy – Coral structure affects the light environment Will coral reefs respond to fast climate change? • Climate shifts – More peak temperature events – More extreme temperature events • Physiological response? • Evolutionary response? 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 Mix of coral polyp and algae Algal overgrowth Shading by Sargassum, chemical effects Herbivores on algae 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 (>90% removal) Indirect effects can become important Evidence for herbivorous fish indirectly helping corals R = redband parrotfish S = ocean surgeonfish Burkepile & Hay, 2010, PLoS One, 5 (e8963) Mangrove /Mangal A tropical and subtropical boundary community Questions: • Why are trees found in some ocean boundaries? – Aquatic/terrestrial – salt/freshwater • What are the characteristics of these ecosystems? • How is mangal important to marine ecosystems? Definitions: • Mangrove – A type of tree that tolerates variation in inundation and salinity • Mangal – A community (set of species) on the marine fringe – Dominated by a special set of salt-tolerant trees – Includes many other, associated species, both of terrestrial and marine origins Characteristics: very low wave action, with silty substrates (sometimes sand) Extent: 2/3 – 3 /4 of tropical shores were fringed with mangal