Indirect effects of a key ecosystem engineer alter survival and growth of foundation coral species
Stegastes nigricans , a "farmerfish" that cultivates algal turf and defends territories from grazers and other intruders, can affect coral indirectly due to increased competition with farmed algal turf and/or reduced predation resulting from territorial aggression directed at corallivores....
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Veröffentlicht in: | Ecology (Durham) 2010-12, Vol.91 (12), p.3538-3548 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Stegastes nigricans
, a "farmerfish" that cultivates algal turf and defends territories from grazers and other intruders, can affect coral indirectly due to increased competition with farmed algal turf and/or reduced predation resulting from territorial aggression directed at corallivores. To investigate the indirect effects of this key ecosystem engineer on coral mortality and growth, we transplanted caged and exposed fragments of four coral species to patch reefs in French Polynesia on which we manipulated the presence of
S. nigricans
and turf, and to reefs naturally devoid of
S. nigricans
. Reef access was two to four times higher for herbivorous fishes, and two times higher for corallivorous fishes, when
S. nigricans
was removed, indicating that reef access is reduced for two important guilds of fishes when
S. nigricans
is present.
Stegastes
' territoriality indirectly benefited delicate acroporids (
Montipora floweri
and
Acropora striata
), yielding a twofold to fivefold reduction in skeletal loss due to lower predation frequencies in the presence of
S. nigricans
. Three corals,
A. striata
,
M. floweri
, and especially
Porites australiensis
, suffered mortality due to overgrowth significantly more frequently in the presence of farmed turf, but
Pocillopora verrucosa
did not. Algal abundance predicted the frequency of overgrowth for only
A. striata
and
P. australiensis
.
M. floweri
were more likely to be overgrown when exposed (uncaged) in the presence of
S. nigricans
, suggesting an interaction modification, in this case that initial predation increased susceptibility to competition with turf. In this community, the presence of
S. nigricans
may increase algal overgrowth of massive
Porites
by facilitating its turf competitors and simultaneously reduce predation of branching corals through territorial exclusion of corallivores. These indirect interactions may underlie previously documented community transitions from disturbance-resistant massive coral to recovering branching corals within
S. nigricans
territories. |
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ISSN: | 0012-9658 1939-9170 |
DOI: | 10.1890/09-2322.1 |