Post-settlement demographics of reef building corals suggest prolonged recruitment bottlenecks

For many organisms, early life stages experience significantly higher rates of mortality relative to adults. However, tracking early life stage individuals through time in natural settings is difficult, limiting our understanding of the duration of these ‘mortality bottlenecks’, and the time require...

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Veröffentlicht in:Oecologia 2022-06, Vol.199 (2), p.387-396
Hauptverfasser: Sarribouette, Lauranne, Pedersen, Nicole E., Edwards, Clinton B., Sandin, Stuart A.
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container_title Oecologia
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creator Sarribouette, Lauranne
Pedersen, Nicole E.
Edwards, Clinton B.
Sandin, Stuart A.
description For many organisms, early life stages experience significantly higher rates of mortality relative to adults. However, tracking early life stage individuals through time in natural settings is difficult, limiting our understanding of the duration of these ‘mortality bottlenecks’, and the time required for survivorship to match that of adults. Here, we track a cohort of juvenile corals (1–5 cm maximum diameter) from 12 taxa at a remote atoll in the Central Pacific from 2013 to 2017 and describe patterns of annual survivorship. Of the 537 juveniles initially detected, 219 (41%) were alive 4 years later, 163 (30%) died via complete loss of live tissue from the skeleton, and the remaining 155 (29%) died via dislodgement. The differing mortality patterns suggest that habitat characteristics, as well as species-specific features, may influence early life stage survival. Across most taxa, survival fit a logistic model, reaching > 90% annual survival within 4 years. These data suggest that mortality bottlenecks characteristic of ‘recruitment’ extend up to 5 years after individuals can be visually detected. Ultimately, replenishment of adult coral populations via sexual reproduction is needed to maintain both coral cover and genetic diversity. This study provides key insights into the dynamics and time scales that characterize these critical early life stages.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s00442-022-05196-7
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source Springer Journals
subjects Adults
Atolls
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Cohorts
Coral reefs
Corals
Demographics
Developmental stages
Early experience
Ecology
Genetic diversity
Genetic variation
Habitat selection
Hydrology/Water Resources
Juveniles
Life Sciences
Mortality
Mortality patterns
Plant Sciences
Population Ecology–Original Research
Recruitment
Recruitment (fisheries)
Replenishment
Reproduction (biology)
Sexual reproduction
Survival
Taxa
Tracking
title Post-settlement demographics of reef building corals suggest prolonged recruitment bottlenecks
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