Abstract

A number of tropical reefs have transitioned from coral to macroalgal dominance, but the role of macroalgal competition in coral decline is debated. There is a need to understand the relative roles of direct coral-algal effects versus indirect, microbially mediated effects shaping these interactions, as well as the relevant scales at which interactions operate under natural field, as opposed to laboratory, conditions. We conducted a manipulative field experiment investigating how direct contact versus close proximity (approx. 1.5 cm) with macroalgae (Galaxaura rugosa, Sargassum polycystum) impacted the growth, photosynthetic efficiency, and prokaryotic microbiome of the common Indo-Pacific coral Acropora millepora. Both coral growth and photosynthetic efficiency were suppressed when in direct contact with algae or their inert mimics--but not when in close proximity to corals without direct contact. Coral microbiomes were largely unaltered in composition, variability, or diversity regardless of treatment, although a few uncommon taxa differed in abundance among treatments. Negative impacts of macroalgae were contact dependent, accounted for by physical structure alone and had minimal effects on coral microbiomes. The spatial constraints of these interactions have important implications for understanding and predicting benthic community dynamics as reefs degrade.

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