| Literature DB >> 24711964 |
Stacy Y Zhang1, Kelly E Speare1, Zachary T Long2, Kimberly A McKeever1, Megan Gyoerkoe1, Aaron P Ramus3, Zach Mohorn1, Kelsey L Akins1, Sarah M Hambridge1, Nicholas A J Graham4, Kirsty L Nash4, Elizabeth R Selig5, John F Bruno1.
Abstract
More diverse communities are thought to be more stable-the diversity-stability hypothesis-due to increased resistance to and recovery from disturbances. For example, high diversity can make the presence of resilient or fast growing species and key facilitations among species more likely. How natural, geographic biodiversity patterns and changes in biodiversity due to human activities mediate community-level disturbance dynamics is largely unknown, especially in diverse systems. For example, few studies have explored the role of diversity in tropical marine communities, especially at large scales. We tested the diversity-stability hypothesis by asking whether coral richness is related to resistance to and recovery from disturbances including storms, predator outbreaks, and coral bleaching on tropical coral reefs. We synthesized the results of 41 field studies conducted on 82 reefs, documenting changes in coral cover due to disturbance, across a global gradient of coral richness. Our results indicate that coral reefs in more species-rich regions were marginally less resistant to disturbance and did not recover more quickly. Coral community resistance was also highly dependent on pre-disturbance coral cover, probably due in part to the sensitivity of fast-growing and often dominant plating acroporid corals to disturbance. Our results suggest that coral communities in biodiverse regions, such as the western Pacific, may not be more resistant and resilient to natural and anthropogenic disturbances. Further analyses controlling for disturbance intensity and other drivers of coral loss and recovery could improve our understanding of the influence of diversity on community stability in coral reef ecosystems.Entities:
Keywords: Biodiveristy; Community ecology; Coral reef; Disturbance; Recovery; Resilience; Resistance; Stability
Year: 2014 PMID: 24711964 PMCID: PMC3970800 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.308
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Coral community richness and resistance to disturbance.
3-D scatterplot of the relationship between coral community richness, coral loss (net change in absolute percent cover in response to disturbance) and initial coral cover. See Table 1 for results of statistical analysis. Dashed lines represent the regression plane, and point coloration represents region. Refer to the Statistical Supplement for a version of this figure plotted with the response variable square root transformed.
Figure 2Coral community richness and recovery from disturbance.
Scatterplot of the relationship between the post-disturbance recovery of absolute coral cover and estimated coral species richness. Refer to the Statistical Supplement for a version of this figure plotted with the response variable log transformed.
Linear models performed in analyses.
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| Richness + maxdepth + disturbance + region + BLCC | 351.94 | 0.71 | 4.04e−07 |
| Richness + maxdepth + BLCC | 349.46 | 0.65 | 5.56e−09 |
| Richness + BLCC | 414.92 | 0.60 | 2.73e−10 |
| Richness + maxdepth + disturbance + region + BLCC | 354.75 | 0.71 | 2.85e−06 |
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| Richness + maxdepth + disturbance + region + BLCC | 148.77 | 0.70 | 5.62e−07 |
| • Intercept | 0.05 | ||
| • Richness | 0.78 | ||
| • Max depth | 0.95 | ||
| • Disturbance—COTS | 0.69 | ||
| • Disturbance—Storms | 0.51 | ||
| • Region—E. Pacific | 0.17 | ||
| • Region—Indian Ocean | 0.67 | ||
| • Region—W. Pacific | 0.98 | ||
| • BLCC | 3.72e−8 | ||
| Richness + maxdepth + BLCC | 147.60 | 0.63 | 1.50e−08 |
| • Intercept | 0.15 | ||
| • Richness | 0.03 | ||
| • Max depth | 0.61 | ||
| • BLCC | 1.02e−08 | ||
| Richness + BLCC | 174.83 | 0.59 | 6.82e−10 |
| Richness + maxdepth + disturbance + region + BLCC | 150.30 | 0.72 | 2.49e−06 |
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| Richness + maxdepth + disturbance + region + PDCC | 264.05 | 0.27 | 0.03 |
| Richness + maxdepth | 264.11 | 0.12 | 0.04 |
| Richness | 274.63 | 0.062 | 0.07 |
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| Richness + maxdepth + disturbance + region + PDCC | 104.77 | 0.38 | 0.04e−1 |
| • Intercept | 3.95e−06 | ||
| • Richness | 0.56 | ||
| • Max depth | 0.10 | ||
| • Disturbance—COTS | 0.35 | ||
| • Disturbance—Storms | 0.21 | ||
| • Region—E. Pacific | 0.25 | ||
| • Region—Indian Ocean | 0.46 | ||
| • Region—W. Pacific | 0.46 | ||
| • PDCC | 0.13 | ||
| Richness + maxdepth | 109.21 | 0.15 | 0.01 |
| Richness | 115.60 | 0.11 | 0.01 |
Notes.
Indicates best fit decline models which did differ significantly based upon AIC.
Indicates overall best fit models for coral cover decline and recovery based upon lowest AIC.
p-values for best fit model factors listed below model description.
Baseline (prior to disturbance) coral cover
Immediately post-disturbance coral cover