Abstract

One of the key components in assessing marine sessile organism demography is determining recruitment patterns to benthic habitats. An analysis of serially deployed recruitment tiles across depth (6 and 12 m), seasons (summer and winter) and space (meters to kilometres) was used to quantify recruitment assemblage structure (abundance and percent cover) of corals, sponges, ascidians, algae and other sessile organisms from the northern sector of the Great Barrier Reef (GBR). Polychaetes were most abundant on recruitment titles, reaching almost 50% of total recruitment, yet covered <5% of each tile. In contrast, mean abundances of sponges, ascidians, algae, and bryozoans combined was generally less than 20% of total recruitment, with percentage cover ranging between 15–30% per tile. Coral recruitment was very low, with <1 recruit per tile identified. A hierarchal analysis of variation over a range of spatial and temporal scales showed significant spatio-temporal variation in recruitment patterns, but the highest variability occurred at the lowest spatial scale examined (1 m—among tiles). Temporal variability in recruitment of both numbers of taxa and percentage cover was also evident across both summer and winter. Recruitment across depth varied for some taxonomic groups like algae, sponges and ascidians, with greatest differences in summer. This study presents some of the first data on benthic recruitment within the northern GBR and provides a greater understanding of population ecology for coral reefs.

Highlights

  • Coral reefs exhibit remarkable biodiversity [1]

  • The broad objective of this study was to begin to meet some of those knowledge gaps of recruitment patterns of benthic coral reef communities within a region of Torres Strait, northern Australia

  • The finding that recruitment variability was highest at the smaller spatial scales examined in this study highlights the heterogeneity that occurs within habitats

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Coral reefs exhibit remarkable biodiversity [1]. The conspicuous scleractinian corals form key structural components of coral reefs numerous other groups play important functional roles. Reef-consolidating algae [2] and sponges play vital roles in nutrient cycling and aid in benthic-pelagic energy coupling [3]. The underlying resilience of coral reefs, in part, relies on the maintenance and persistence of these coral reef communities through space and time [4], for sessile benthic taxa with dispersive larval or propagule phases.

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call