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Ocean acidification and warming will lower coral reef resilience

Ocean warming and acidification from increasing levels of atmospheric CO(2) represent major global threats to coral reefs, and are in many regions exacerbated by local-scale disturbances such as overfishing and nutrient enrichment. Our understanding of global threats and local-scale disturbances on...

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Autores principales: Anthony, Kenneth R N, Maynard, Jeffrey A, Diaz-Pulido, Guillermo, Mumby, Peter J, Marshall, Paul A, Cao, Long, Hoegh-Guldberg, Ove
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3597261/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2486.2010.02364.x
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author Anthony, Kenneth R N
Maynard, Jeffrey A
Diaz-Pulido, Guillermo
Mumby, Peter J
Marshall, Paul A
Cao, Long
Hoegh-Guldberg, Ove
author_facet Anthony, Kenneth R N
Maynard, Jeffrey A
Diaz-Pulido, Guillermo
Mumby, Peter J
Marshall, Paul A
Cao, Long
Hoegh-Guldberg, Ove
author_sort Anthony, Kenneth R N
collection PubMed
description Ocean warming and acidification from increasing levels of atmospheric CO(2) represent major global threats to coral reefs, and are in many regions exacerbated by local-scale disturbances such as overfishing and nutrient enrichment. Our understanding of global threats and local-scale disturbances on reefs is growing, but their relative contribution to reef resilience and vulnerability in the future is unclear. Here, we analyse quantitatively how different combinations of CO(2) and fishing pressure on herbivores will affect the ecological resilience of a simplified benthic reef community, as defined by its capacity to maintain and recover to coral-dominated states. We use a dynamic community model integrated with the growth and mortality responses for branching corals (Acropora) and fleshy macroalgae (Lobophora). We operationalize the resilience framework by parameterizing the response function for coral growth (calcification) by ocean acidification and warming, coral bleaching and mortality by warming, macroalgal mortality by herbivore grazing and macroalgal growth via nutrient loading. The model was run for changes in sea surface temperature and water chemistry predicted by the rise in atmospheric CO(2) projected from the IPCC's fossil-fuel intensive A1FI scenario during this century. Results demonstrated that severe acidification and warming alone can lower reef resilience (via impairment of coral growth and increased coral mortality) even under high grazing intensity and low nutrients. Further, the threshold at which herbivore overfishing (reduced grazing) leads to a coral–algal phase shift was lowered by acidification and warming. These analyses support two important conclusions: Firstly, reefs already subjected to herbivore overfishing and nutrification are likely to be more vulnerable to increasing CO(2). Secondly, under CO(2) regimes above 450–500 ppm, management of local-scale disturbances will become critical to keeping reefs within an Acropora-rich domain.
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spelling pubmed-35972612013-03-19 Ocean acidification and warming will lower coral reef resilience Anthony, Kenneth R N Maynard, Jeffrey A Diaz-Pulido, Guillermo Mumby, Peter J Marshall, Paul A Cao, Long Hoegh-Guldberg, Ove Glob Chang Biol Original Articles Ocean warming and acidification from increasing levels of atmospheric CO(2) represent major global threats to coral reefs, and are in many regions exacerbated by local-scale disturbances such as overfishing and nutrient enrichment. Our understanding of global threats and local-scale disturbances on reefs is growing, but their relative contribution to reef resilience and vulnerability in the future is unclear. Here, we analyse quantitatively how different combinations of CO(2) and fishing pressure on herbivores will affect the ecological resilience of a simplified benthic reef community, as defined by its capacity to maintain and recover to coral-dominated states. We use a dynamic community model integrated with the growth and mortality responses for branching corals (Acropora) and fleshy macroalgae (Lobophora). We operationalize the resilience framework by parameterizing the response function for coral growth (calcification) by ocean acidification and warming, coral bleaching and mortality by warming, macroalgal mortality by herbivore grazing and macroalgal growth via nutrient loading. The model was run for changes in sea surface temperature and water chemistry predicted by the rise in atmospheric CO(2) projected from the IPCC's fossil-fuel intensive A1FI scenario during this century. Results demonstrated that severe acidification and warming alone can lower reef resilience (via impairment of coral growth and increased coral mortality) even under high grazing intensity and low nutrients. Further, the threshold at which herbivore overfishing (reduced grazing) leads to a coral–algal phase shift was lowered by acidification and warming. These analyses support two important conclusions: Firstly, reefs already subjected to herbivore overfishing and nutrification are likely to be more vulnerable to increasing CO(2). Secondly, under CO(2) regimes above 450–500 ppm, management of local-scale disturbances will become critical to keeping reefs within an Acropora-rich domain. Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2011-05 /pmc/articles/PMC3597261/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2486.2010.02364.x Text en Copyright © 2011 Blackwell Publishing http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ Re-use of this article is permitted in accordance with the Creative Commons Deed, Attribution 2.5, which does not permit commercial exploitation.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Anthony, Kenneth R N
Maynard, Jeffrey A
Diaz-Pulido, Guillermo
Mumby, Peter J
Marshall, Paul A
Cao, Long
Hoegh-Guldberg, Ove
Ocean acidification and warming will lower coral reef resilience
title Ocean acidification and warming will lower coral reef resilience
title_full Ocean acidification and warming will lower coral reef resilience
title_fullStr Ocean acidification and warming will lower coral reef resilience
title_full_unstemmed Ocean acidification and warming will lower coral reef resilience
title_short Ocean acidification and warming will lower coral reef resilience
title_sort ocean acidification and warming will lower coral reef resilience
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3597261/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2486.2010.02364.x
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