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Nature


Title:Thresholds and the resilience of Caribbean coral reefs
Author(s):Mumby PJ; Hastings A; Edwards HJ;
Address:"Marine Spatial Ecology Lab, School of BioSciences, University of Exeter, Prince of Wales Road, Exeter EX4 4PS, UK. p.j.mumby@ex.ac.uk"
Journal Title:Nature
Year:2007
Volume:450
Issue:7166
Page Number:98 - 101
DOI: 10.1038/nature06252
ISSN/ISBN:1476-4687 (Electronic) 0028-0836 (Linking)
Abstract:"The deteriorating health of the world's coral reefs threatens global biodiversity, ecosystem function, and the livelihoods of millions of people living in tropical coastal regions. Reefs in the Caribbean are among the most heavily affected, having experienced mass disease-induced mortality of the herbivorous urchin Diadema antillarum in 1983 and two framework-building species of coral. Declining reef health is characterized by increases in macroalgae. A critical question is whether the observed macroalgal bloom on Caribbean reefs is easily reversible. To answer this question, we must resolve whether algal-dominated reefs are an alternative stable state of the ecosystem or simply the readily reversible result of a phase change along a gradient of some environmental or ecological parameter. Here, using a fully parameterized simulation model in combination with a simple analytical model, we show that Caribbean reefs became susceptible to alternative stable states once the urchin mortality event of 1983 confined the majority of grazing to parrotfishes. We reveal dramatic hysteresis in a natural system and define critical thresholds of grazing and coral cover beyond which resilience is lost. Most grazing thresholds lie near the upper level observed for parrotfishes in nature, suggesting that reefs are highly sensitive to parrotfish exploitation. Ecosystem thresholds can be combined with stochastic models of disturbance to identify targets for the restoration of ecosystem processes. We illustrate this principle by estimating the relationship between current reef state (coral cover and grazing) and the probability that the reef will withstand moderate hurricane intensity for two decades without becoming entrained in a shift towards a stable macroalgal-dominated state. Such targets may help reef managers face the challenge of addressing global disturbance at local scales"
Keywords:Animals Anthozoa/growth & development/*physiology Caribbean Region *Ecosystem Eukaryota/growth & development/physiology Jamaica Time Factors;
Notes:"MedlineMumby, Peter J Hastings, Alan Edwards, Helen J eng Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S. England 2007/11/02 Nature. 2007 Nov 1; 450(7166):98-101. doi: 10.1038/nature06252"

 
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