Abstract

The persistence of populations of marine organisms depends on the success of the dual processes of reproduction and recruitment. The production of offspring alone is inconsequential unless larvae and propagules can recruit, which often entails a period of development and distribution in the water column and subsequent selection of appropriate habitats. For fish, this may mean drifting in currents before responding to particular habitat cues. For corals and other benthic invertebrates, larvae must undergo site selection, settlement and metamorphosis into the juvenile form, and survivorship is directly linked to site choice and environmental conditions. Both biotic and abiotic factors affect population replenishment success, and hence, anthropogenic influences such as pollution, sedimentation and climate change can negatively affect critical processes such as reproductive synchronization in spawning species, successful embryological development, appropriate site selection, settlement, metamorphosis and in the case of reef building corals, acquisition of the required zooxanthellae partner. Effective management practices are essential for ensuring the persistence of populations of coral reef organisms of economic, cultural and ecological value.

Highlights

  • There are six chemically mediated steps involved in the replenishment of reef populations: gamete development within mature coral colonies, synchronization of gamete release, successful fertilization of eggs by sperm, complete embryological development to the competent larval stage, settlement and metamorphic induction, and acquisition of symbiotic zooxanthellae in recruits that do not have them vertically transmitted by the parent colony (Richmond, 2014; Figure 1)

  • Sediment particles often serve as nuclei that aggregate organic material, including mucus and phytoplankton, which harbor bacteria, and when this material sinks to the bottom, it increases biological oxygen demand (BOD), dropping both oxygen levels and pH at the sedimentwater interface (Wolanski et al, 2003)

  • Acropora millepora larval settlement and metamorphosis was reduced by 50% when these planulae were exposed to bleached crustose coralline algae (CCA) compared to healthy CCA from ambient seawater conditions

Read more

Summary

REPRODUCTION AND RECRUITMENT

Reproduction is the process by which new individuals are formed from parental stock, and can occur through asexual or sexual means. There are six chemically mediated steps involved in the replenishment of reef populations: gamete development within mature coral colonies, synchronization of gamete release, successful fertilization of eggs by sperm, complete embryological development to the competent larval stage, settlement and metamorphic induction, and acquisition of symbiotic zooxanthellae in recruits that do not have them vertically transmitted by the parent colony (Richmond, 2014; Figure 1). These key processes are affected by both density dependent and density independent factors.

LARVAL COMPETENCY
Water Quality
Bottom Quality
Ocean Acidifcation
Findings
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
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