Abstract

Early mortality in cohortsof the coral Pocillopora damicornis (Linnaeus) was monitored under experimental conditions on a reef in order to evaluate effects of sedimentation, grazing, predation and competition. Corals that settled in dishes in the laboratory were placed on the reef flat about 3 days after metamorphosis. Six different conditions were tested in each series of experiments: orientation of dishes (upward, vertical and downward) by with and without protection against potential grazers by covering the dish with a net. Survival of juvenile corals on both protected and unprotected dishes facing upward was lower than in the vertical or downward direction. Under the vertical facing and protected conditions, algal growth was more intensive and algae trapped sediment; mortality of juvenile corals by algae and sedimentation increased gradually. In the uprotected and vertical conditions, algal growth on the surface was removed constantly by grazing invertebrates and fishes and the juvenile corals were removed or killed as well. On the downward facing dishes, survivorship of juveniles was relatively high in both protected and unprotected conditions. This habitat attracted many sessile animals that killed some juveniles by competition. Thus, juvenile corals survived better in experimentally manipulated microhabitats not affected by direct sedimentation, not exposed to direct grazing activity, and not occupied by rapidly growing filamentous algae.

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