2020
DOI: 10.1101/2020.02.03.929521
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A geometric basis for surface habitat complexity and biodiversity

Abstract: AbstractStructurally complex habitats tend to contain more species and higher total abundances than simple habitats. This ecological paradigm is grounded in first principles: species richness scales with area, and surface area and niche density increase with three-dimensional complexity. Here we present a geometric basis for surface habitats that unifies ecosystems and spatial scales. The theory is framed by fundamental geometric constraints among three structure descriptors—su… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(29 citation statements)
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“…Structural complexity is essential for hydrodynamic processes that transport heat and nutrients and entrain larvae (Monismith 2007;Hearn et al 2001;Hata et al 2017). Reef complexity is important to many ecological patterns and processes, such as the maintenance of biodiversity (Torres-Pulliza et al 2020), habitat zonation (Done 1982), and recovery following disturbances (Burns et al 2016). While the importance of structural complexity has been recognized for decades (Alvarez-Filip et al 2011;Graham and Nash 2013), little is known about how individual corals of different species, morphologies, and sizes contribute to reef complexity in an objective, quantitative manner.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Structural complexity is essential for hydrodynamic processes that transport heat and nutrients and entrain larvae (Monismith 2007;Hearn et al 2001;Hata et al 2017). Reef complexity is important to many ecological patterns and processes, such as the maintenance of biodiversity (Torres-Pulliza et al 2020), habitat zonation (Done 1982), and recovery following disturbances (Burns et al 2016). While the importance of structural complexity has been recognized for decades (Alvarez-Filip et al 2011;Graham and Nash 2013), little is known about how individual corals of different species, morphologies, and sizes contribute to reef complexity in an objective, quantitative manner.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When applied to coral reefs, photogrammetry can accurately capture a wide range of both two-dimensional (2D) and 3D data (House et al 2018). Photogrammetric products such as point clouds, digital elevation models (DEMs), and orthomosaic imagery can be used to measure coral reef structural complexity (Anelli et al 2019;Friedman et al 2012;Figueira et al 2015;Burns et al 2015;Leon et al 2015), coral growth (Ferrari et al 2017), coral community composition (Burns et al 2015;Torres-Pulliza et al 2020), and structural changes in a reef environment (Burns et al 2016;Fallati et al 2020). Photogrammetric products can be spatially registered for repeat surveys that can measure ecological and structural changes to the reef (Edwards et al 2017).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This technique provides researchers versatility to study the reef from the coral polyp to reef-scale. To date, a majority of studies on coral reefs utilizing SfM methodology have focused on quantifying structural complexity (Burns et al, 2015a;Figueira et al, 2015;Storlazzi et al, 2016;Bryson et al, 2017;Fukunaga et al, 2020;Torres-Pulliza et al, 2020). Others have used SfM in smallscale studies to quantify disease and bleaching (Fox et al, 2019;Voss et al, 2019;Burns et al, 2020), spatial clustering of corals (Edwards et al, 2017;Pedersen et al, 2019), coral growth (Kodera et al, 2020;Lange and Perry, 2020), and size frequency distributions (Hernández-Landa et al, 2020).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Photogrammetry also enables novel metrics which can capture more subtle changes in growth and fitness, but also alterations to coral structure that may indicate unexpected outcomes of phenotype-environment interactions [36,37] (Figure 1). Some of the most exciting metrics relate to coral fitness (e.g., accretion, surface area, and volume) [15,38,39] and habitat function (e.g., fractal dimension, surface curvature, branch packing, interstitial space, field of view, and object distribution) [40][41][42][43]. ).…”
Section: Innovating and Standardizing Indicators Of Restoration Successmentioning
confidence: 99%