4.4 Article

The importance of zooplankton to the daily metabolic carbon requirements of healthy and bleached corals at two depths

期刊

出版社

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.jembe.2008.09.015

关键词

Coral bleaching; Coral feeding; CHAR; Depth; Heterotrophy; Zooplankton

资金

  1. Andrew Mellon Foundation
  2. National Science Foundation Chemical Oceanography [OCE-0610487]
  3. Biological Oceanography [OCE-0542415]
  4. Government of Alberta Sir James Lougheed Award of Distinction
  5. William Penn Fellowship
  6. University of Pennsylvania Summer Stipend in Paleobiology
  7. Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology
  8. [1329]

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Bleached and non-bleached fragments of three species of Hawaiian corals were exposed to enhanced and ambient concentrations of zooplankton at I and 6 m depth to determine the contribution of zooplankton to the coral's daily carbon budget. The size and taxonomic grouping were recorded for every zooplankton captured and the relative input of zooplankton of different size classes was determined. The contribution of heterotrophy to animal respiration (CHAR) was calculated using an improved method that included the proportionate contribution of zooplankton from all size classes. Results show that the proportionate effects of species, depth and bleaching treatments on coral feeding rates were not significantly different between ambient and enhanced zooplankton concentrations. Corals captured the same size and assemblage of zooplankton under all evaluated conditions, and preferentially captured plankters smaller than 400 pm. Feeding rates of Porites lobata increased with depth regardless of bleaching status. Feeding rates of Porites compressa increased with depth in non-bleached corals, but not in bleached corals. Within depth, feeding rates of bleached Montipora capitata increased, P compressa decreased and R lobata remained unchanged relative to non-bleached fragments. Therefore, the feeding response of corals to the same disturbance may vary considerably. Calculated CHAR values show that heterotrophic carbon from zooplankton plays a much larger role in the daily carbon budget of corals than previously estimated, accounting for 46% of some coral species' daily metabolic carbon requirements when healthy and 147% when bleached. Thus, heterotrophically acquired carbon made an important contribution to the daily carbon budget of corals under all experimental conditions. These results suggest that the relative importance of autotrophic and heterotrophic carbon to a coral's energetic needs is mediated by a coral's bleaching status and environment, and should be considered on a continuum, from 100% photoautotrophy to 100% heterotrophy. (C) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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