Portfolio effects and functional redundancy contribute to the maintenance of octocoral forests on Caribbean reefs.

Sci Rep

Department of Environment and Sustainability and Department of Geology, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, 14260, USA.

Published: May 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Scleractinian coral populations are declining on Caribbean reefs, leading to an increase in arborescent octocorals, necessitating further study of the ecological factors that support their persistence.
  • From 2014 to 2019, researchers examined octocoral communities in St. John, US Virgin Islands, analyzing species dynamics and potential resilience through portfolio effects.
  • The study found that while octocoral species varied in abundance annually, responses to environmental events like hurricanes were synchronized, indicating structural redundancy that helps stabilize these octocoral forests.

Article Abstract

Declines in abundance of scleractinian corals on shallow Caribbean reefs have left many reefs dominated by forests of arborescent octocorals. The ecological mechanisms favoring their persistence require exploration. We quantified octocoral communities from 2014 to 2019 at two sites in St. John, US Virgin Islands, and evaluated their dynamics to assess whether portfolio effects might contribute to their resilience. Octocorals were identified to species, or species complexes, and their abundances and heights were measured, with height serving as a biomass proxy. Annual variation in abundance was asynchronous among species, except when they responded in similar ways to hurricanes in September 2017. Multivariate changes in octocoral communities, viewed in 2-dimensional ordinations, were similar between sites, but analyses based on density differed from those based on the biomass proxy. On the density scale, variation in the community composed of all octocoral species was indistinguishable from that quantified with subsets of 6-10 of the octocoral species at one of the two sites, identifying structural redundancy in the response of the community. Conservation of the relative colony size-frequency structure, combined with temporal changes in the species represented by the tallest colonies, suggests that portfolio effects and functional redundancy stabilize the vertical structure and canopy in these tropical octocoral forests.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9061744PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-10478-4DOI Listing

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