نتایج جستجو برای: coral relocation

تعداد نتایج: 21465  

2011
Kate Osborne Andrew M. Dolman Scott C. Burgess Kerryn A. Johns

Coral reef ecosystems worldwide are under pressure from chronic and acute stressors that threaten their continued existence. Most obvious among changes to reefs is loss of hard coral cover, but a precise multi-scale estimate of coral cover dynamics for the Great Barrier Reef (GBR) is currently lacking. Monitoring data collected annually from fixed sites at 47 reefs across 1300 km of the GBR ind...

2013
Lorenzo Alvarez-Filip Juan P. Carricart-Ganivet Guillermo Horta-Puga Roberto Iglesias-Prieto

Coral communities are changing rapidly worldwide through loss of coral cover and shifts in species composition. Although many reef-building corals are likely to decline, some weedy opportunistic species might increase in abundance. Here we explore whether the reshuffling of species can maintain ecosystem integrity and functioning. Using four common Caribbean reef-building coral genera we modele...

2002
Tim McClanahan Joseph Maina

Corals were bleached throughout Kenya and most of the western Indian Ocean in the warm season of 1998 and coral mortality occurred over an extended period from March to July 1998 (1–3). Nearly all studied Kenyan coral reefs had coral cover of around 10% after the coral bleaching (1, 3). The greatest levels of mortality were experienced in marine protected areas that originally had high coral co...

2014
Stacy Y. Zhang Kelly E. Speare Zachary T. Long Kimberly A. McKeever Megan Gyoerkoe Aaron P. Ramus Zach Mohorn Kelsey L. Akins Sarah M. Hambridge Nicholas A.J. Graham Kirsty L. Nash Elizabeth R. Selig John F. Bruno

More diverse communities are thought to be more stable-the diversity-stability hypothesis-due to increased resistance to and recovery from disturbances. For example, high diversity can make the presence of resilient or fast growing species and key facilitations among species more likely. How natural, geographic biodiversity patterns and changes in biodiversity due to human activities mediate co...

Journal: :PLoS ONE 2007
John F. Bruno Elizabeth R. Selig

BACKGROUND A number of factors have recently caused mass coral mortality events in all of the world's tropical oceans. However, little is known about the timing, rate or spatial variability of the loss of reef-building corals, especially in the Indo-Pacific, which contains 75% of the world's coral reefs. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPLE FINDINGS We compiled and analyzed a coral cover database of 6001 qu...

Journal: :The Journal of experimental biology 2007
Göran E Nilsson Jean-Paul A Hobbs Sara Ostlund-Nilsson

One of the most diverse vertebrate communities is found on tropical coral reefs. Coral-reef fishes are not only remarkable in color and shape, but also in several aspects of physiological performance. Early in life, at the end of the pelagic larval stage, coral-reef fishes are the fastest swimmers of all fishes in relation to body size, and show the highest specific rates of maximum oxygen upta...

2006
Tamar L. Goulet

Many corals (stony corals and octocorals) rely on their symbiotic algae (zooxanthellae) for survival. Under stress, zooxanthellae are expelled, resulting in coral bleaching. The hypothesis that corals may survive climate change by exchanging algal types is shown here to be potentially applicable only to a minority of corals. Data on 442 coral species from 43 studies reveal that only a few coral...

2006
J. D. Bell R. Galzin

The effect of percentage live coral cover on the number of fish species and individuals was determined by censusing fish from a series of reefs of comparable structural complexity, but with different proportions of live coral, in the lagoon of Mataiva Atoll, Tuamotu Archipelago. Regression analysis showed that there was a highly significant (p < 0.001) positive relationship between live coral c...

2017
Raquel S. Peixoto Phillipe M. Rosado Deborah Catharine de Assis Leite Alexandre S. Rosado David G. Bourne

The symbiotic association between the coral animal and its endosymbiotic dinoflagellate partner Symbiodinium is central to the success of corals. However, an array of other microorganisms associated with coral (i.e., Bacteria, Archaea, Fungi, and viruses) have a complex and intricate role in maintaining homeostasis between corals and Symbiodinium. Corals are sensitive to shifts in the surroundi...

Journal: :Scientific reports 2013
Deron E Burkepile Jacob E Allgeier Andrew A Shantz Catharine E Pritchard Nathan P Lemoine Laura H Bhatti Craig A Layman

On coral reefs, fishes can facilitate coral growth via nutrient excretion; however, as coral abundance declines, these nutrients may help facilitate increases in macroalgae. By combining surveys of reef communities with bioenergetics modeling, we showed that fish excretion supplied 25 times more nitrogen to forereefs in the Florida Keys, USA, than all other biotic and abiotic sources combined. ...

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