Abstract

Evaluating the efficacy of artificial structures in enhancing or sustaining biodiversity on tropical coral reefs is key to assessing their role in reef conservation or management. Here, we compare spatial and temporal patterns of colonization and succession of the benthic assemblage on settlement collectors (ceramic tiles) in a 13-mo mensurative experiment on a suspended artificial reef, a seafloor artificial reef, and two nearby natural reefs at Eilat, Gulf of Aqaba. We also conducted a concurrent 7-mo manipulative experiment on the suspended reef and one of the natural reefs, and monitored fish feeding behaviour on experimental collectors, to examine effects of large mobile consumers on these patterns. In both experiments, taxonomic composition as percent planar cover for the whole community or biomass for the invertebrate component differed between collector topsides, dominated by a filamentous algal matrix, and shaded undersides with a profuse assemblage of suspension- or filter-feeding invertebrates. In the mensurative experiment, we found differences in final community and invertebrate composition between sites, which clustered according to reef type (artificial vs. natural) for collector undersides. Invertebrate biomass was greater at both artificial reefs than at one (undersides) or both (topsides) natural reefs. In the manipulative experiment, we found similar differences in composition between sites/reef types as well as between treatments (exclusion vs. control), and the invertebrate biomass was greater on the artificial reef. Invertebrate biomass was greater in the exclusion treatment than the control on collector undersides, suggesting mobile consumers can affect community composition and abundance. Predominant fish species observed interacting with collectors differed between artificial and natural reefs, likely contributing to differences in patterns of colonization and succession between sites and reef types. Our findings suggest artificial reefs have the potential to enhance cover and biomass of certain reef-associated assemblages, particularly those occupying sheltered microhabitats.

Highlights

  • Coral reefs are deteriorating due to multiple natural and anthropogenic stressors [1,2,3]

  • Corals and other sessile invertebrates extensively covered the undersides of artificial reefs (FER, 84%; IGL, 59%) (S1 Fig)

  • Our findings suggest that when free space is made available on heavily colonized artificial reefs, the emergent benthic assemblages can differ in composition and abundance from those on natural reefs

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Summary

Introduction

Coral reefs are deteriorating due to multiple natural and anthropogenic stressors [1,2,3]. Benthic community succession on artificial and natural coral reefs in the Gulf of Aqaba of the Nova Scotia Department of Labour and Advanced Education (project ref, # 20150137 and 2016000182 to AM). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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