Abstract

Caribbean populations of the long-spined black sea urchin Diadema antillarum Philippi were decimated by a disease-induced mass mortality in the early 1980’s. The present study provides an updated status of the D. antillarum recovery and population characteristics in La Parguera Natural Reserve, Puerto Rico. The last detailed study to assess population recovery in 2001, indicated a slow, and modest recovery, albeit densities remained far below pre-mass mortality levels. Population densities were assessed along three depth intervals in six reef localities and one depth in three lagoonal sea-grass mounds using ten 20 m2 (10 × 2 m) belt-transects at each depth interval. Most of these were previously surveyed in 2001. All individuals encountered along the belt transects were sized in situ with calipers and rulers to characterize the size (age) structure of each population and get insight into the urchin’s population dynamics and differences across localities in the area. Habitat complexity (rugosity) was assessed in all depth intervals. No significant differences in population densities between reef zones (inner shelf and mid-shelf) were observed, but significantly higher densities were found on shallow habitats (<5 m depth; 2.56 ± 1.6 ind/m2) compared to intermediate (7–12 m; 0.47 ± 0.8 ind/m2) and deep (>12 m; 0.04 ± 0.08 ind/m2) reef habitats in almost all sites surveyed. Habitat complexity had the greatest effect on population densities at all levels (site, zone and depth) with more rugose environments containing significantly higher densities and wider size structures. Comparison between survey years revealed that D. antillarum populations have not increased since 2001, and urchins seem to prefer shallower, more complex and productive areas of the reef. Populations were dominated by medium to large (5–9 cm in test diameter) individuals and size-frequency distributions indicated that smaller juveniles were virtually absent compared to 2001, which could reflect a recruitment-limited population and explain in part, the lack of increase in population densities. The limited temporal scale of this study, high horizontal movement of individuals along the complex, shallower reef and inshore habitats could also explain the general decline in mean densities. Other extrinsic factors affecting reproductive output and/or succesful recruitment and survival of juveniles likely contribute to the high variablility in population densities observed over time.

Highlights

  • The main objective of this study was to assess the status of D. antillarum populations 30 years after the mass mortality event by examining urchin abundances, spatial distribution and population size structure, and testing any potential relationship with habitat characteristics along a nearshore to offshore gradient in La Parguera Natural Reserve (LPNR), southwest coast of Puerto Rico

  • Results of this study indicate that populations of the black sea urchin D. antillarum show no significant increase or decrease in population densities in La Parguera Natural Reserve since the last population assessment 12 years prior (Weil, Torres & Ashton, 2005)

  • Recovery of Diadema populations have been very slow across the region

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Summary

Introduction

Population recovery of the Caribbean long-spined sea urchin, Diadema antillarum (Philippi, 1845) after the widespread, species-specific epizootic event that nearly eradicated the species in the early 1980s, has been variable but slow (Randall, Schroeder & Starck II, 1964; Ogden & Lobel, 1978; Lessios et al, 1984; Liddell & Ohlhorst, 1986; Hughes, Reed & Boyle, 1987; Hughes, 1994; Aronson & Precht, 2000; Chiappone et al, 2002; Weil, Torres & Ashton, 2005; Lessios, 2005; Lessios, 2016). A phase-shift from coral-dominated to algal-dominated reefs with detrimental effects to coral populations and reef health was reported for many overfished localities throughout the region (Bak, Carpay & De Ruytervan Steveninck, 1984; Hay & Taylor, 1985; Liddell & Ohlhorst, 1986; Hughes, Reed & Boyle, 1987; Hughes, 1994). The dramatic increase in algal cover was most notable in areas like Jamaica, where overfishing had significantly reduced the number of herbivorous fish which increased importance on grazing by D. antillarum This was not always the common pattern throughout the Caribbean, especially in areas where populations of herbivorous fish were not overfished Disease outbreaks and bleaching events continued impacting Caribbean reefs through the 1990’s and 2000’s, killing coral and other key invertebrate foundational species and opening more space for algae to grow (Miller et al, 2006; Wilkinson, 2006; Weil et al, 2006; Rogers et al, 2008; Weil et al, 2009; Eakin et al, 2010)

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