Bleaching, coral mortality and subsequent survivorship on a West Australian fringing reef

The spring and summer of 2010/11 saw an exceptionally strong La Niña push warm waters from Indonesia down the Western Australian coastline, resulting in a host of extraordinary biological oddities including significant bleaching of Western Australian corals. Here, we report a 79–92 % decline in cora...

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Veröffentlicht in:Coral reefs 2013-03, Vol.32 (1), p.233-238
Hauptverfasser: Depczynski, M., Gilmour, J. P., Ridgway, T., Barnes, H., Heyward, A. J., Holmes, T. H., Moore, J. A. Y., Radford, B. T., Thomson, D. P., Tinkler, P., Wilson, S. K.
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container_issue 1
container_start_page 233
container_title Coral reefs
container_volume 32
creator Depczynski, M.
Gilmour, J. P.
Ridgway, T.
Barnes, H.
Heyward, A. J.
Holmes, T. H.
Moore, J. A. Y.
Radford, B. T.
Thomson, D. P.
Tinkler, P.
Wilson, S. K.
description The spring and summer of 2010/11 saw an exceptionally strong La Niña push warm waters from Indonesia down the Western Australian coastline, resulting in a host of extraordinary biological oddities including significant bleaching of Western Australian corals. Here, we report a 79–92 % decline in coral cover for a location in the Ningaloo Marine Park where sustained high water temperatures over an 8-month period left just 1–6 % of corals alive. The severity of bleaching provided an opportunity to investigate the resilience of different taxonomic groups and colony size classes to an acute but protracted episode of thermal stress. While the sub-dominant community of massive growth forms fared reasonably well, the dominant Acropora and Montipora assemblages all died, with the exception of the
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subjects Animal and plant ecology
Animal, plant and microbial ecology
Applied ecology
Biological and medical sciences
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Cnidaria. Ctenaria
Conservation, protection and management of environment and wildlife
Coral reefs
Disease
Environmental degradation: ecosystems survey and restoration
Freshwater & Marine Ecology
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
High temperature
Invertebrates
La Nina
Life Sciences
Marine parks
Mortality
Oceanography
Sea water ecosystems
Synecology
Thermal stress
Water temperature
title Bleaching, coral mortality and subsequent survivorship on a West Australian fringing reef
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