Publications by authors named "Tom Schils"

The island of Guam in the west Pacific has seen a significant decrease in coral cover since 2013. Lafac Bay, a marine protected area in northeast Guam, served as a reference site for benthic communities typical of forereefs on the windward side of the island. The staghorn coral Acropora abrotanoides is a dominant and characteristic ecosystem engineer of forereef communities on exposed shorelines.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Technological innovations that improve the speed, scale, reproducibility, and accuracy of monitoring surveys will allow for a better understanding of the global decline in tropical reef health. The DiveRay, a diver-operated hyperspectral imager, and a complementary machine learning pipeline to automate the analysis of hyperspectral imagery were developed for this purpose. To evaluate the use of a hyperspectral imager underwater, the automated classification of benthic taxa in reef communities was tested.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

For more than a century, coral reefs have been exposed to increasing anthropogenic disturbances that have profoundly altered their community structure. These perturbations continue to challenge coral reefs in new ways as ecological paradigms are recast in the Anthropocene Epoch. In recent decades, macroalgal blooms have blighted Caribbean reefs, but the appearance of aggressive peyssonnelioid algal crusts (PAC) that are rapidly increasing in abundance to become dominant members of the benthos on Caribbean and Indo-Pacific reefs is a novel phenomenon in tropical seas.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The Indo-Pacific legume genus is now classified in the Archidendron clade, characterized by specific leaf and pod features, yet its relationships with other genera remain unclear.
  • Researchers used three distinct gene sequencing datasets to analyze the genetic connections within the Archidendron clade and confirmed the monophyly of the genus.
  • Their findings identified a combined clade called the Serianthes clade and noted some genetic discrepancies that may be due to rapid evolution or incomplete lineage sorting.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Successful recruitment of invertebrate larvae to reef substrates is essential to the health of tropical coral reef ecosystems and to their capacity to recover from disturbances. Crustose calcifying red algae (CCRA) are a species rich group of seaweeds that have been identified as important recruitment substrates for scleractinian corals. Most studies on the settlement preference of coral larvae on CCRA use morphological species identifications that can lead to unreliable species identification and do not allow for examining species-specific interactions between coral larvae and CCRA.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The genus Ramicrusta (order Peyssonneliales) is a new record for Micronesia, with range expansions of Ramicrusta fujiiana and R. lateralis to Guam. In addition, four species (Ramicrusta adjoulanensis, R.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The tropical alga previously recognized as Gibsmithia hawaiiensis (Dumontiaceae, Rhodophyta) was recently suggested to represent a complex of species distributed throughout the Indo-Pacific Ocean and characterized by a peculiar combination of hairy (pilose) gelatinous lobes growing on cartilaginous stalks. Phylogenetic reconstructions based on three genetic markers are presented here with the inclusion of new samples. Further diversity is reported within the complex, with nine lineages spread in four major phylogenetic groups.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This paper presents a comprehensive quantitative baseline assessment of in situ net calcium carbonate accretion rates (g CaCO3 cm(-2) yr(-1)) of early successional recruitment communities on Calcification Accretion Unit (CAU) plates deployed on coral reefs at 78 discrete sites, across 11 islands in the central and south Pacific Oceans. Accretion rates varied substantially within and between islands, reef zones, levels of wave exposure, and island geomorphology. For forereef sites, mean accretion rates were the highest at Rose Atoll, Jarvis, and Swains Islands, and the lowest at Johnston Atoll and Tutuila.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Volcanically active islands abound in the tropical Pacific and harbor complex coral communities. Whereas lava streams and deep ash deposits are well-known to devastate coral communities through burial and smothering, little is known about the effect of moderate amounts of small particulate ash deposits on reef communities. Volcanic ash contains a diversity of chemical compounds that can induce nutrient enrichments triggering changes in benthic composition.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The new species Rhipilia coppejansii is described from Guam. This species, which has the external appearance of a Chlorodesmis species, features tenacula upon microscopical examination, a diagnostic character of Rhipilia. This unique morphology, along with the tufA and rbcL data presented herein, set this species apart from others in the respective genera.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • - Coral reefs are facing serious threats from climate change, leading to coral bleaching which affects biodiversity and economies globally.
  • - A new method using gene expression analysis (qPCR) was developed to assess coral health and bleaching risks at specific reef sites by evaluating 13 candidate genes in the coral species Porites astreoides.
  • - The study found that changes in the expression of two specific genes (Hsp16 and actin) can effectively monitor heat-light stress in corals, showing promise for wider application in reef management across different coral species and locations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Bouillomides A (1) and B (2) are two depsipeptide analogues of dolastatin 13. Isolated from a Guamanian sample of Lyngbya bouillonii, the planar structures were elucidated on the basis of HR-ESI-MS and NMR data, while the absolute configurations were determined by employing functional group conversions, modified Marfey's analysis, and detailed analyses of ROESY correlations. Compounds 1 and 2 selectively inhibited serine proteases elastase (IC(50) = 1.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Despite the potential model role of the green algal genus Codium for studies of marine speciation and evolution, there have been difficulties with species delimitation and a molecular phylogenetic framework was lacking. In the present study, 74 evolutionarily significant units (ESUs) are delimited using 227 rbcL exon 1 sequences obtained from specimens collected throughout the genus' range. Several morpho-species were shown to be poorly defined, with some clearly in need of lumping and others containing pseudo-cryptic diversity.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Nuclear ribosomal and plastid DNA sequences of specimens belonging to section Halimeda of the pantropical green seaweed genus Halimeda show that the group under scrutiny contains many more genetically delineable species than those recognized by classical taxonomy. Discordances between phylograms inferred from nuclear and plastid DNA sequences suggest that reticulate evolution has been involved in speciation within the clade. Nonetheless, our data do not allow ruling out certain alternative explanations for the discordances.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF