Diel temperature and pH variability scale with depth across diverse coral reef habitats
Coral reefs are facing intensifying stressors, largely due to global increases in seawater temperature and decreases in pH. However, there is extensive environmental variability within coral reef ecosystems which can impact how organisms respond to global trends. We deployed spatial arrays of autono...
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Zusammenfassung: | Coral reefs are facing intensifying stressors, largely due to global
increases in seawater temperature and decreases in pH. However, there is
extensive environmental variability within coral reef ecosystems which can
impact how organisms respond to global trends. We deployed spatial arrays
of autonomous sensors across distinct shallow coral reef habitats to
determine patterns of spatiotemporal variability in seawater
physicochemical parameters. Temperature and pH were positively correlated
over the course of a day due to solar heating and light-driven metabolism.
The mean temporal and spatial ranges of temperature and pH were positively
correlated across all sites, with different regimes of variability
observed in different reef types. Ultimately, depth was a reliable
predictor of the average diel ranges in both seawater temperature and pH.
These results demonstrate there is widespread environmental variability on
diel timescales within coral reefs related to water column depth, which
needs to be included in assessments of how global change will locally
affect reef ecosystems. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.tj1nf5f |