Recruitment Variability of Coral Reef Sessile Communities of the Far North Great Barrier Reef.

One of the key components in assessing marine sessile organism demography is determining recruitment patterns to benthic habitats. An analysis of serially deployed recruitment tiles across depth (6 and 12 m), seasons (summer and winter) and space (meters to kilometres) was used to quantify recruitme...

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Main Authors: Heidi M Luter, Alan R Duckworth, Carsten W Wolff, Elizabeth Evans-Illidge, Steve Whalan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4822782?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-ee144e579a014afa9ca7bffd3550e2692020-11-24T21:50:24ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01114e015318410.1371/journal.pone.0153184Recruitment Variability of Coral Reef Sessile Communities of the Far North Great Barrier Reef.Heidi M LuterAlan R DuckworthCarsten W WolffElizabeth Evans-IllidgeSteve WhalanOne of the key components in assessing marine sessile organism demography is determining recruitment patterns to benthic habitats. An analysis of serially deployed recruitment tiles across depth (6 and 12 m), seasons (summer and winter) and space (meters to kilometres) was used to quantify recruitment assemblage structure (abundance and percent cover) of corals, sponges, ascidians, algae and other sessile organisms from the northern sector of the Great Barrier Reef (GBR). Polychaetes were most abundant on recruitment titles, reaching almost 50% of total recruitment, yet covered <5% of each tile. In contrast, mean abundances of sponges, ascidians, algae, and bryozoans combined was generally less than 20% of total recruitment, with percentage cover ranging between 15-30% per tile. Coral recruitment was very low, with <1 recruit per tile identified. A hierarchal analysis of variation over a range of spatial and temporal scales showed significant spatio-temporal variation in recruitment patterns, but the highest variability occurred at the lowest spatial scale examined (1 m-among tiles). Temporal variability in recruitment of both numbers of taxa and percentage cover was also evident across both summer and winter. Recruitment across depth varied for some taxonomic groups like algae, sponges and ascidians, with greatest differences in summer. This study presents some of the first data on benthic recruitment within the northern GBR and provides a greater understanding of population ecology for coral reefs.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4822782?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Heidi M Luter
Alan R Duckworth
Carsten W Wolff
Elizabeth Evans-Illidge
Steve Whalan
spellingShingle Heidi M Luter
Alan R Duckworth
Carsten W Wolff
Elizabeth Evans-Illidge
Steve Whalan
Recruitment Variability of Coral Reef Sessile Communities of the Far North Great Barrier Reef.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Heidi M Luter
Alan R Duckworth
Carsten W Wolff
Elizabeth Evans-Illidge
Steve Whalan
author_sort Heidi M Luter
title Recruitment Variability of Coral Reef Sessile Communities of the Far North Great Barrier Reef.
title_short Recruitment Variability of Coral Reef Sessile Communities of the Far North Great Barrier Reef.
title_full Recruitment Variability of Coral Reef Sessile Communities of the Far North Great Barrier Reef.
title_fullStr Recruitment Variability of Coral Reef Sessile Communities of the Far North Great Barrier Reef.
title_full_unstemmed Recruitment Variability of Coral Reef Sessile Communities of the Far North Great Barrier Reef.
title_sort recruitment variability of coral reef sessile communities of the far north great barrier reef.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description One of the key components in assessing marine sessile organism demography is determining recruitment patterns to benthic habitats. An analysis of serially deployed recruitment tiles across depth (6 and 12 m), seasons (summer and winter) and space (meters to kilometres) was used to quantify recruitment assemblage structure (abundance and percent cover) of corals, sponges, ascidians, algae and other sessile organisms from the northern sector of the Great Barrier Reef (GBR). Polychaetes were most abundant on recruitment titles, reaching almost 50% of total recruitment, yet covered <5% of each tile. In contrast, mean abundances of sponges, ascidians, algae, and bryozoans combined was generally less than 20% of total recruitment, with percentage cover ranging between 15-30% per tile. Coral recruitment was very low, with <1 recruit per tile identified. A hierarchal analysis of variation over a range of spatial and temporal scales showed significant spatio-temporal variation in recruitment patterns, but the highest variability occurred at the lowest spatial scale examined (1 m-among tiles). Temporal variability in recruitment of both numbers of taxa and percentage cover was also evident across both summer and winter. Recruitment across depth varied for some taxonomic groups like algae, sponges and ascidians, with greatest differences in summer. This study presents some of the first data on benthic recruitment within the northern GBR and provides a greater understanding of population ecology for coral reefs.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4822782?pdf=render
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