Seabirds boost coral reef resilience

Benkwitt, Cassandra E and D'Angelo, Cecilia and Dunn, Ruth E and Gunn, Rachel L and Healing, Samuel and Mardones, M Loreto and Wiedenmann, Joerg and Wilson, Shaun K and Graham, Nicholas A J (2023) Seabirds boost coral reef resilience. Science Advances, 9 (49): eadj0390. ISSN 2375-2548

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Abstract

Global climate change threatens tropical coral reefs, yet local management can influence resilience. While increasing anthropogenic nutrients reduce coral resistance and recovery, it is unknown how the loss, or restoration, of natural nutrient flows affects reef recovery. Here, we test how natural seabird-derived nutrient subsidies, which are threatened by invasive rats, influence the mechanisms and patterns of reef recovery following an extreme marine heatwave using multiyear field experiments, repeated surveys, and Bayesian modeling. Corals transplanted from rat to seabird islands quickly assimilated seabird-derived nutrients, fully acclimating to new nutrient conditions within 3 years. Increased seabird-derived nutrients, in turn, caused a doubling of coral growth rates both within individuals and across entire reefs. Seabirds were also associated with faster recovery time of Acropora coral cover (

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Science Advances
ID Code:
211527
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
14 Dec 2023 11:20
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
25 Apr 2024 02:40