Increasing disturbance frequency undermines coral reef recovery

IF 7.1 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ECOLOGY Ecological Monographs Pub Date : 2024-06-24 DOI:10.1002/ecm.1619
Michael J. Emslie, Murray Logan, Peran Bray, Daniela M. Ceccarelli, Alistair J. Cheal, Terry P. Hughes, Kerryn A. Johns, Michelle J. Jonker, Emma V. Kennedy, James T. Kerry, Camille Mellin, Ian R. Miller, Kate Osborne, Marji Puotinen, Tane Sinclair-Taylor, Hugh Sweatman
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Abstract

Climate-driven alterations to disturbance regimes are increasingly disrupting patterns of recovery in many biomes. Here, we examine the impact of disturbance and subsequent level of recovery in live hard coral cover on the Great Barrier Reef (GBR) across the last three decades. We demonstrate that a preexisting pattern of infrequent disturbances of limited spatial extent has changed to larger and more frequent disturbances, dominated by marine heatwaves and severe tropical cyclones. We detected an increase in the impact (measured as coral loss) across 265 individual disturbance impacts on 131 reefs in a 36-year dataset (1985–2022). Additionally, the number of survey reefs impacted by disturbance has increased each decade from 6% in the 1980s to 44% in the 2010s, as has the frequency of mass coral bleaching across the GBR, which has increased between 19% and 28% per year, and cyclones (3%–5% per year), resulting in less time for recovery. Of the 265 disturbance impacts we recorded, complete recovery to the highest levels of coral cover recorded earlier in this study (the “historical benchmark”) occurred only 62 (23%) times. Of the 23% of disturbance impacts that resulted in complete recovery to historical benchmarks, 34/62 recovered to their benchmark in 2021 or 2022. Complete recovery was more likely when the historical benchmark was <25% live hard coral cover. The lack of recovery was attributed to recovery time windows becoming shorter due to increases in the frequency of cyclones and of thermal stress events that result in mass coral bleaching episodes. These results confirm that climate change is contributing to ecosystem-wide changes in the ability of coral reefs to recover.

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干扰频率的增加破坏了珊瑚礁的恢复
在许多生物群落中,气候驱动的干扰机制的改变正日益破坏恢复模式。在这里,我们研究了过去三十年中干扰对大堡礁(GBR)活体硬珊瑚覆盖率的影响以及随后的恢复水平。我们证明,以前存在的空间范围有限的不频繁干扰模式已转变为以海洋热浪和严重热带气旋为主的更大和更频繁的干扰。我们发现,在 36 年的数据集中(1985-2022 年),131 个珊瑚礁受到了 265 次干扰影响(以珊瑚损失衡量)。此外,受干扰影响的调查珊瑚礁数量每十年都在增加,从 20 世纪 80 年代的 6% 增加到 2010 年代的 44%,整个 GBR 大规模珊瑚白化的频率也在增加,每年增加 19% 到 28%,气旋(每年 3%-5%)也在增加,导致恢复时间缩短。在我们记录的 265 次干扰影响中,完全恢复到本研究早期记录的最高珊瑚覆盖水平("历史基准")的情况仅有 62 次(23%)。在完全恢复到历史基准的 23% 的干扰影响中,34/62 在 2021 年或 2022 年恢复到基准。当历史基准为 25% 的活硬珊瑚覆盖率时,完全恢复的可能性更大。没有恢复的原因是,气旋和导致大规模珊瑚白化事件的热应力事件的频率增加,导致恢复时间窗口变短。这些结果证实,气候变化正在导致整个生态系统的珊瑚礁恢复能力发生变化。
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来源期刊
Ecological Monographs
Ecological Monographs 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
12.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
61
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: The vision for Ecological Monographs is that it should be the place for publishing integrative, synthetic papers that elaborate new directions for the field of ecology. Original Research Papers published in Ecological Monographs will continue to document complex observational, experimental, or theoretical studies that by their very integrated nature defy dissolution into shorter publications focused on a single topic or message. Reviews will be comprehensive and synthetic papers that establish new benchmarks in the field, define directions for future research, contribute to fundamental understanding of ecological principles, and derive principles for ecological management in its broadest sense (including, but not limited to: conservation, mitigation, restoration, and pro-active protection of the environment). Reviews should reflect the full development of a topic and encompass relevant natural history, observational and experimental data, analyses, models, and theory. Reviews published in Ecological Monographs should further blur the boundaries between “basic” and “applied” ecology. Concepts and Synthesis papers will conceptually advance the field of ecology. These papers are expected to go well beyond works being reviewed and include discussion of new directions, new syntheses, and resolutions of old questions. In this world of rapid scientific advancement and never-ending environmental change, there needs to be room for the thoughtful integration of scientific ideas, data, and concepts that feeds the mind and guides the development of the maturing science of ecology. Ecological Monographs provides that room, with an expansive view to a sustainable future.
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