Sandin Sa, Edwards Cb, Pedersen Ne, Petrovic V, Pavoni G, Alcantar E, Chancellor Ks, Fox Md, Stallings B, Sullivan Cj, Rotjan Rd, Ponchio F, Zgliczynski Bj
Demography Corals Coloniality Photogrammetry Coloniality Demography Animals Corals Pacific Islands Anthozoa Islands Coral Reefs Photogrammetry Population Dynamics
Reef-building coral taxa demonstrate considerable flexibility and diversity in reproduction and growth mechanisms. Corals take advantage of this flexibility to increase or decrease size through clonal expansion and loss of live tissue area (i.e. via reproduction and mortality of constituent polyps). The biological lability of reef-building corals may be expected to map onto varying patterns of demography across environmental contexts which can contribute to geographic variation in population dynamics. Here we explore the patterns of growth of two common coral taxa, corymbose Pocillopora and massive Porites, across seven islands in the central and south Pacific. The islands span a natural gradient of environmental conditions, including a range of pelagic primary production, a metric linked to the relative availability of inorganic nutrients and heterotrophic resources for mixotrophic corals, and sea surface temperature and thermal histories. Over a multi-year sampling interval, most coral colonies experienced positive growth (greater planar area of live tissue in second relative to first time point), though the distributions of growth varied across islands. Island-level median growth did not relate simply to estimated pelagic primary productivity or temperature. However, at locations that experienced an extreme warm-water event during the sampling interval, most Porites colonies experienced net losses of live tissue and nearly all Pocillopora colonies experienced complete mortality. While descriptive statistics of demographics offer valuable insights into trends and variability in colony change through time, simplified models predicting growth patterns based on summarized oceanographic metrics appear inadequate for robust demographic prediction. We propose that the complexity of life history strategies among colonial reef-building corals introduces unique demographic flexibility for colonies to respond to a wide breadth of environmental conditions.
@inbook{oai:it.cnr:prodotti:454562, title = {Considering the rates of growth in two taxa of coral across Pacific islands}, author = {Sandin Sa and Edwards Cb and Pedersen Ne and Petrovic V and Pavoni G and Alcantar E and Chancellor Ks and Fox Md and Stallings B and Sullivan Cj and Rotjan Rd and Ponchio F and Zgliczynski Bj}, doi = {10.1016/bs.amb.2020.08.006}, year = {2020} }