Abstract

Abstract. Coral bleaching events continue to drive the degradation of coral reefs worldwide, causing a shift in the benthic community from coral- to algae-dominated ecosystems. Critically, this shift may decrease the capacity of degraded coral reef communities to maintain net positive accretion during warming-driven stress events (e.g., reef-wide coral bleaching). Here we measured rates of net ecosystem calcification (NEC) and net ecosystem production (NEP) on a degraded coral reef lagoon community (coral cover < 10 % and algae cover > 20 %) during a reef-wide bleaching event in February 2020 at Heron Island on the Great Barrier Reef. We found that during this bleaching event, rates of NEP and NEC across replicate transects remained positive and did not change in response to bleaching. Repeated benthic surveys over a period of 20 d indicated an increase in the percent area of bleached coral tissue, corroborated by relatively low Symbiodiniaceae densities (∼ 0.6 × 106 cm−2) and dark-adapted photosynthetic yields in photosystem II of corals (∼ 0.5) sampled along each transect over this period. Given that a clear decline in coral health was not reflected in the overall NEC estimates, it is possible that elevated temperatures in the water column that compromise coral health enhanced the thermodynamic favorability for calcification in other ahermatypic benthic calcifiers. These data suggest that positive NEC on degraded reefs may not equate to the net positive accretion of a complex, three-dimensional reef structure in a future, warmer ocean. Critically, our study highlights that if coral cover continues to decline as predicted, NEC may no longer be an appropriate proxy for reef growth as the proportion of the NEC signal owed to ahermatypic calcification increases and coral dominance on the reef decreases.

Highlights

  • Coral have long been the focus of climate change research in tropical oceans as they are a keystone species responsible for the biogenic construction of complex reef habitat (Grigg and Dollar, 1990)

  • Because HOBO temperature loggers may record higher temperatures than surrounding seawater due to internal heating of the transparent plastic casing (Bahr et al, 2016), HOBO loggers were deployed in the shade on a cinder block, and downloaded temperature data were corrected for precision (48 h side-by-side logging of all nine loggers in an aquarium) and accuracy

  • Across the whole study area, the benthic community was predominately covered by sediment (59 ± 7 %) and fleshy algae (25 ± 6 %)

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Summary

Introduction

Coral have long been the focus of climate change research in tropical oceans as they are a keystone species responsible for the biogenic construction of complex reef habitat (Grigg and Dollar, 1990). Adverse effects to their ability to construct calcium carbonate structure have negative implications for coral reef ecosystems, given corals are the major organism responsible for collectively maintaining the accumulation of permanent reef structure at a rate that overcomes the biological and physical mechanisms that act to break reefs down (carbonate dissolution, bioerosion, storm activity; Eyre et al, 2018). Lantz et al.: Will daytime community calcification reflect reef accretion on future reefs warming and subsequent reef-wide bleaching events (Courtney et al, 2018)

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