4.7 Article

Rapid diversity and abundance decline in a Caribbean coral reef sponge community

Journal

BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION
Volume 127, Issue 2, Pages 167-176

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biocon.2005.08.007

Keywords

sponges; coral reef conservation; Caribbean; diversity decline; monitoring techniques

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Sponges are abundant and diverse on coral reefs, and play key functional roles; but virtually nothing is known of their dynamics. This is the first report of coral reef sponge community dynamics documented by a series of censuses in which volume and species of every individual were recorded. At the start of the 14 year study, there were 1395 sponge individuals, representing 39 species in nine orders, and a total sponge volume of 33,721 cm(3) in the censused area of a shallow Caribbean reef in San Blas, Panama. The most striking results of the 5 censuses were steady disappearance of species (51.3%) throughout the study period, and a steep drop in total sponge volume (42.6%). Species in keratose orders and with massive growth forms were lost disproportionately. Sponge losses could not be attributed to predators, physical disturbance (including a hurricane), extreme episodes of other abiotic factors, or disproportionately great loss of rare species due to random fluctuations. Disease may have played a role. High loss rates documented at this and nearby sites could be a local phenomenon, but scattered reports of disease and mass mortality of sponges from other sites suggest these data may reflect region-wide losses. Monitoring programs designed for corals and mobile unitary organisms can miss changes in sponges because very high sponge species diversity, facile fragmentation and fusion, and quick and complete disappearance of dead sponges, impedes perception of changes if there are no prior censuses. Whether or not sponge declines are extensive will remain unknown until repeat censuses have been accomplished at additional sites. Sponges can increase water clarity, bind live corals to the reef frame, and facilitate reef regeneration, suggesting that loss of sponges could accelerate declines of coral reefs. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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