Abstract

AbstractIn contrast with a general decline of Caribbean reef corals, a previously rare sun coral is increasing in abundance within shallow coral communities on Curaçao. This azooxanthellate scleractinian was identified as Cladopsammia manuelensis, which has an amphi‐Atlantic distribution. Over the last decade, C. manuelensis has increased abundance along the leeward coast of Curaçao (southern Caribbean) between depths of 4 and 30 m. This species was initially not noticed because it resembles the invasive coral Tubastraea coccinea, which was introduced to Curaçao from the Indo‐Pacific around 1940. However, in contrast to T. coccinea, C. manuelensis was previously only present on deeper reef sections (>70 m) of Caribbean reefs. Our observations illustrate how the sudden increase in abundance of a previously unnoticed, apparently cryptogenic species could result from natural dynamics on present‐day reefs, but also could easily be mistaken for an invasive species. The finding that deep reef sections can harbor species capable of colonizing shallower reef zones highlights the importance of thorough inventories of reef communities across large depth ranges, which can help us to discriminate between range increases of native species and the arrival of invasives.

Highlights

  • The first introduced Tubastrea species, T. coccinea Lesson, 1829, arrived in the Caribbean at Curaßcao and Puerto Rico around 1940 and subsequently expanded its range northward to Georgia (USA) and southward to southern Brazil (Cairns 2000, Creed et al 2017)

  • C. manuelensis has increased abundance along the leeward coast of Curaßcao between depths of 4 and 30 m. This species was initially not noticed because it resembles the invasive coral Tubastraea coccinea, which was introduced to Curaßcao from the Indo-Pacific around 1940

  • The finding that deep reef sections can harbor species capable of colonizing shallower reef zones highlights the importance of thorough inventories of reef communities across large depth ranges, which can help us to discriminate between range increases of native species and the arrival of invasives

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Summary

Introduction

The first introduced Tubastrea species, T. coccinea Lesson, 1829, arrived in the Caribbean at Curaßcao and Puerto Rico around 1940 and subsequently expanded its range northward to Georgia (USA) and southward to southern Brazil (Cairns 2000, Creed et al 2017). In contrast with a general decline of Caribbean reef corals, a previously rare sun coral is increasing in abundance within shallow coral communities on Curaßcao. C. manuelensis has increased abundance along the leeward coast of Curaßcao (southern Caribbean) between depths of 4 and 30 m.

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