AI Article Synopsis

  • Caribbean coral reefs have shifted to algal-dominated environments over recent decades, and the specific reasons for this change are not fully understood due to insufficient data before human impact.
  • A detailed 3,000-year study conducted in Caribbean Panama reveals that declines in coral growth rates and parrotfish populations began in the prehistoric era, indicating long-standing issues.
  • The study emphasizes that parrotfish are crucial for sustaining coral reefs, as their abundance directly influences coral growth rates, highlighting the urgent need to restore parrotfish populations for reef recovery.

Article Abstract

Caribbean coral reefs have transformed into algal-dominated habitats over recent decades, but the mechanisms of change are unresolved due to a lack of quantitative ecological data before large-scale human impacts. To understand the role of reduced herbivory in recent coral declines, we produce a high-resolution 3,000 year record of reef accretion rate and herbivore (parrotfish and urchin) abundance from the analysis of sediments and fish, coral and urchin subfossils within cores from Caribbean Panama. At each site, declines in accretion rates and parrotfish abundance were initiated in the prehistorical or historical period. Statistical tests of direct cause and effect relationships using convergent cross mapping reveal that accretion rates are driven by parrotfish abundance (but not vice versa) but are not affected by total urchin abundance. These results confirm the critical role of parrotfish in maintaining coral-dominated reef habitat and the urgent need for restoration of parrotfish populations to enable reef persistence.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5267576PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ncomms14160DOI Listing

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