2013
DOI: 10.5402/2013/739034
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Coral Reef Resilience through Biodiversity

Abstract: Irrefutable evidence of coral reef degradation worldwide and increasing pressure from rising seawater temperatures and ocean acidification associated with climate change have led to a focus on reef resilience and a call to “manage” coral reefs for resilience. Ideally, global action to reduce emission of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases will be accompanied by local action. Effective management requires reduction of local stressors, identification of the characteristics of resilient reefs, and design of… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(17 citation statements)
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References 209 publications
(318 reference statements)
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“…Mona's isolated reef systems have followed a transitional trajectory leading to a major phase shift favoring macroalgae and non-reef building, ephemeral coral taxa. Lack of coral reef recovery following major disturbances, including climate change, has been a concerning phenomenon across the Caribbean (McClanahan & Muthiga, 1998; Aronson et al., 2002;Gardner et al, 2003;Rogers, 2013), and might have significant long-term ecological and socio-economic consequences (Buddemeier et al, 2008;Paddack et al, 2009;Lane et al, 2013), including regionalscale declines in coral cover and reef complexity (Alvarez-Flip et al, 2011). We suggest that lack of net recovery in remote Mona Island's reefs could be the combined result of several mechanisms involving climate change-related post-bleaching mass coral mortality, chronic YBD disease outbreaks, rapid substrate dominance and out-competition of remnant corals by brown unpalatable macroalgae, declining herbivory due to long-term fishing impacts, lack of D. antillarum population recovery, altered microbial communities associated with crustose coralline algae (CCA) that may negatively affect coral larval settlement cues, and Mona Island's reefs limited connectivity to other reef systems which highly limits potential successful larval recruitment from other locations.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Mona's isolated reef systems have followed a transitional trajectory leading to a major phase shift favoring macroalgae and non-reef building, ephemeral coral taxa. Lack of coral reef recovery following major disturbances, including climate change, has been a concerning phenomenon across the Caribbean (McClanahan & Muthiga, 1998; Aronson et al., 2002;Gardner et al, 2003;Rogers, 2013), and might have significant long-term ecological and socio-economic consequences (Buddemeier et al, 2008;Paddack et al, 2009;Lane et al, 2013), including regionalscale declines in coral cover and reef complexity (Alvarez-Flip et al, 2011). We suggest that lack of net recovery in remote Mona Island's reefs could be the combined result of several mechanisms involving climate change-related post-bleaching mass coral mortality, chronic YBD disease outbreaks, rapid substrate dominance and out-competition of remnant corals by brown unpalatable macroalgae, declining herbivory due to long-term fishing impacts, lack of D. antillarum population recovery, altered microbial communities associated with crustose coralline algae (CCA) that may negatively affect coral larval settlement cues, and Mona Island's reefs limited connectivity to other reef systems which highly limits potential successful larval recruitment from other locations.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The area offers outstanding possibilities for further research. The particular combination of biological and physical environmental factors and the high diversity of coral and other species may make this ecosystem more resistant and more resilient to future local, regional and global stressors [1,27]. …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Research is needed on how these factors interact and how they will affect the overall biodiversity, function, and transition of these ecosystems. The high diversity of coral reefs (among species and within species) and variable responses of organisms to climate change increase the likelihood that at least some reef species will be able to persist in locations with particular environmental conditions in the face of changing climate (Rogers, 2013 and diversity of corals in the mangrove habitats of St. John could be a recent phenomenon (within the past several decades). Evidence of shoreward migrations of coral in response to past changes in sea level rise is well documented in the geologic record (e.g.…”
Section: Alternative Refuges and Resiliency Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%