Click
here to close Hello! We notice that
you are using Internet Explorer, which is not supported by Echinobase
and may cause the site to display incorrectly. We suggest using a
current version of Chrome,
FireFox,
or Safari.
Competitors as accomplices: seaweed competitors hide corals from predatory sea stars.
Clements CS
,
Hay ME
.
???displayArticle.abstract???
Indirect biotic effects arising from multispecies interactions can alter the structure and function of ecological communities--often in surprising ways that can vary in direction and magnitude. On Pacific coral reefs, predation by the crown-of-thorns sea star, Acanthaster planci, is associated with broad-scale losses of coral cover and increases of macroalgal cover. Macroalgal blooms increase coral-macroalgal competition and can generate further coral decline. However, using a combination of manipulative field experiments and observations, we demonstrate that macroalgae, such as Sargassum polycystum, produce associational refuges for corals and dramatically reduce their consumption by Acanthaster. Thus, as Acanthaster densities increase, macroalgae can become coral mutualists, despite being competitors that significantly suppress coral growth. Field feeding experiments revealed that the protective effects of macroalgae were strong enough to cause Acanthaster to consume low-preference corals instead of high-preference corals surrounded by macroalgae. This highlights the context-dependent nature of coral-algal interactions when consumers are common. Macroalgal creation of associational refuges from Acanthaster predation may have important implications for the structure,function and resilience of reef communities subject to an increasing number of biotic disturbances.
Atsatt,
Plant defense guilds.
1976,
Pubmed
Barott,
Microbial to reef scale interactions between the reef-building coral Montastraea annularis and benthic algae.
2012,
Pubmed
Barott,
Unseen players shape benthic competition on coral reefs.
2012,
Pubmed
Bellwood,
Confronting the coral reef crisis.
2004,
Pubmed
Bonaldo,
Seaweed-coral interactions: variance in seaweed allelopathy, coral susceptibility, and potential effects on coral resilience.
2014,
Pubmed
Bruno,
Regional decline of coral cover in the Indo-Pacific: timing, extent, and subregional comparisons.
2007,
Pubmed
Bulleri,
Variability in the effects of macroalgae on the survival and growth of corals: the consumer connection.
2013,
Pubmed
De'ath,
The 27-year decline of coral cover on the Great Barrier Reef and its causes.
2012,
Pubmed
,
Echinobase
Edmunds,
Recovery of Diadema antillarum reduces macroalgal cover and increases abundance of juvenile corals on a Caribbean reef.
2001,
Pubmed
,
Echinobase
Gardner,
Long-term region-wide declines in Caribbean corals.
2003,
Pubmed
Hauri,
Chemical and physical environmental conditions underneath mat- and canopy-forming macroalgae, and their effects on understorey corals.
2010,
Pubmed
He,
Global shifts towards positive species interactions with increasing environmental stress.
2013,
Pubmed
Hughes,
Rising to the challenge of sustaining coral reef resilience.
2010,
Pubmed
Hughes,
Catastrophes, phase shifts, and large-scale degradation of a Caribbean coral reef.
1994,
Pubmed
Hughes,
Phase shifts, herbivory, and the resilience of coral reefs to climate change.
2007,
Pubmed
Kayal,
Predator crown-of-thorns starfish (Acanthaster planci) outbreak, mass mortality of corals, and cascading effects on reef fish and benthic communities.
2012,
Pubmed
,
Echinobase
Mumby,
Coral reef management and conservation in light of rapidly evolving ecological paradigms.
2008,
Pubmed
Nelson,
Coral and macroalgal exudates vary in neutral sugar composition and differentially enrich reef bacterioplankton lineages.
2013,
Pubmed
Pace,
Trophic cascades revealed in diverse ecosystems.
1999,
Pubmed
Pratchett,
Selective coral mortality associated with outbreaks of Acanthaster planci L. in Bootless Bay, Papua New Guinea.
2009,
Pubmed
,
Echinobase
Rasher,
Macroalgal terpenes function as allelopathic agents against reef corals.
2011,
Pubmed
Rasher,
Consumer diversity interacts with prey defenses to drive ecosystem function.
2013,
Pubmed
Rasher,
Competition induces allelopathy but suppresses growth and anti-herbivore defence in a chemically rich seaweed.
2014,
Pubmed
Rasher,
Chemically rich seaweeds poison corals when not controlled by herbivores.
2010,
Pubmed
Smith,
Indirect effects of algae on coral: algae-mediated, microbe-induced coral mortality.
2006,
Pubmed
Strauss,
Indirect effects in community ecology: Their definition, study and importance.
1991,
Pubmed
Sweatman,
No-take reserves protect coral reefs from predatory starfish.
2008,
Pubmed
Vega Thurber,
Macroalgae decrease growth and alter microbial community structure of the reef-building coral, Porites astreoides.
2012,
Pubmed
Wolf,
Synergistic effects of algal overgrowth and corallivory on Caribbean reef-building corals.
2013,
Pubmed