Abstract

Abstract. Coral reefs are declining worldwide. The abundance of corals has decreased alongside a rise of filter feeders, turf, and algae in response to intensifying human pressures. This shift in prevalence of functional groups alters the biogeochemical processes in tropical water ecosystems, thereby influencing reef functioning. An urgent challenge is to understand the functional consequences of these shifts to develop suitable management strategies that aim at preserving the biological functions of reefs. Here, we quantify biogeochemical processes supporting key reef functions (i.e. net community calcification (NCC) and production (NCP) and nutrient recycling) in situ for five different benthic assemblages currently dominating shallow degraded Caribbean reef habitats. To this end, a transparent custom-made enclosure was placed over communities dominated by either one of five functional groups – coral, turf and macroalgae, bioeroding sponges, cyanobacterial mats, or sand – to determine chemical fluxes between these communities and the overlying water, during both day and night. To account for the simultaneous influence that distinct biogeochemical processes have on measured variables, the rates were then derived by solving a model consisting of differential equations describing the contribution of each process to the measured chemical fluxes. Inferred rates were low compared to those known for reef flats worldwide. Reduced accretion potential was recorded, with negative or very modest net community calcification rates for all communities. Net production during the day was also low, suggesting limited accumulation of biomass through photosynthesis and remineralisation of organic matter at night was relatively high in comparison, resulting in net heterotrophy over the survey period for most communities. Estimated recycling processes (i.e. nitrification and denitrification) were high but did not fully counterbalance nutrient release from aerobic mineralisation, rendering all substrates sources of nitrogen. Results suggest similar directions and magnitudes of key biogeochemical processes of distinct communities on this shallow Curaçaoan reef. We infer that the amount and type of organic matter released by abundant algal turfs and cyanobacterial mats on this reef likely enhances heterotroph activity and stimulates the proliferation of less diverse copiotrophic microbial populations, rendering the studied reef net heterotrophic and drawing the biogeochemical “behaviour” of distinct communities closer to each other.

Highlights

  • Community composition and biodiversity across all kinds of ecosystems are responding to escalating anthropogenic activities (McGill et al, 2015)

  • All three sides of the tent contained an opening to allow flushing of the enclosed volume between incubations: during incubations these openings were sealed by zippers

  • Application of Eq (1) to salinity data collected during all incubations yielded dilution rate K ranging between 0.004 and 0.044 min−1

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Summary

Introduction

Community composition and biodiversity across all kinds of ecosystems are responding to escalating anthropogenic activities (McGill et al, 2015). Communities within ecosystems and across spatial scales have become more biologically homogeneous (Burman et al, 2012; Cramer et al, 2021), which may lead to a decrease in functional diversity, limiting services provided by biological communities (Matsuzaki et al, 2013; White et al, 2018). This may cause synchronisation of the biological response to new or intensified anthropogenic pressures across local communities, reducing resilience of metacommunities (Tobias and Monika, 2012; Sonnier et al, 2014; Petsch et al, 2020)

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