4.7 Article

Atoll-dependent variation in depth zonation of benthic communities on remote reefs

Journal

MARINE ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 173, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marenvres.2021.105520

Keywords

Depth zonation; Coral reefs; Remote systems; Benthic ecology; Community composition; Hard coral assemblages

Funding

  1. Bertarelli Foundation as part of the Bertarelli Programme in Marine Science
  2. Darwin Initiative [19-027]
  3. Bangor University Reef Systems research group

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The study assessed depth zonation in benthic communities on the fore reef slope of the Central Indian Ocean and found significant differences in major functional groups and hard coral assemblages between different atolls and within the atolls. The results revealed spatial variation in depth zonation of benthic communities, potentially influenced by biophysical processes across depths and atolls, serving as a baseline for understanding the impacts of future global climate change on benthic communities across depths.
The distribution and organisation of benthic organisms on tropical reefs are typically heterogenous yet display distinct zonation patterns across depth gradients. However, there are few datasets which inform our understanding of how depth zonation in benthic community composition varies spatially among and within different reef systems. Here, we assess the depth zonation in benthic forereef slope communities in the Central Indian Ocean, prior to the back-to-back bleaching events in 2014-2017. We compare benthic communities between shallow (5-10 m) and deep (20-25 m) sites, at two spatial scales: among and within 4 atolls. Our analyses showed the variation in both major functional groups and hard coral assemblages between depth varied among atolls, and within-atoll comparisons revealed distinct differences between shallow and deep forereef slope communities. Indicator taxa analyses characterising the hard coral community between depths revealed a higher number of coral genera characteristic of the deep forereef slopes (10) than the shallow forereef slopes (6). Only two coral genera consistently associated with both depths across all atolls, and these were Acropora and Porites. Our results reveal spatial variation in depth zonation of benthic communities, potentially driven by biophysical processes varying across depths and atolls, and provide a baseline to understand and measure the impacts of future global climate change on benthic communities across depths.

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