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DOI10.1111/gcb.14625
Spatial resilience of the Great Barrier Reef under cumulative disturbance impacts
Mellin, Camille1,2,3; Matthews, Samuel1,4; Anthony, Kenneth R. N.1,5; Brown, Stuart C.2,3; Caley, M. Julian6,7; Johns, Kerryn A.1; Osborne, Kate1; Puotinen, Marjetta8; Thompson, Angus1; Wolff, Nicholas H.9,10; Fordham, Damien A.2,3,11; MacNeil, M. Aaron1,12
发表日期2019
ISSN1354-1013
EISSN1365-2486
卷号25期号:7页码:2431-2445
英文摘要

In the face of increasing cumulative effects from human and natural disturbances, sustaining coral reefs will require a deeper understanding of the drivers of coral resilience in space and time. Here we develop a high-resolution, spatially explicit model of coral dynamics on Australia's Great Barrier Reef (GBR). Our model accounts for biological, ecological and environmental processes, as well as spatial variation in water quality and the cumulative effects of coral diseases, bleaching, outbreaks of crown-of-thorns starfish (Acanthaster cf. solaris), and tropical cyclones. Our projections reconstruct coral cover trajectories between 1996 and 2017 over a total reef area of 14,780 km(2), predicting a mean annual coral loss of -0.67%/year mostly due to the impact of cyclones, followed by starfish outbreaks and coral bleaching. Coral growth rate was the highest for outer shelf coral communities characterized by digitate and tabulate Acropora spp. and exposed to low seasonal variations in salinity and sea surface temperature, and the lowest for inner-shelf communities exposed to reduced water quality. We show that coral resilience (defined as the net effect of resistance and recovery following disturbance) was negatively related to the frequency of river plume conditions, and to reef accessibility to a lesser extent. Surprisingly, reef resilience was substantially lower within no-take marine protected areas, however this difference was mostly driven by the effect of water quality. Our model provides a new validated, spatially explicit platform for identifying the reefs that face the greatest risk of biodiversity loss, and those that have the highest chances to persist under increasing disturbance regimes.


WOS研究方向Biodiversity & Conservation ; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
来源期刊GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/100169
作者单位1.Australian Inst Marine Sci, Townsville, Qld, Australia;
2.Univ Adelaide, Inst Environm, Adelaide, SA, Australia;
3.Univ Adelaide, Sch Biol Sci, Adelaide, SA, Australia;
4.James Cook Univ, Australian Res Council Ctr Excellence Coral Reef, Townsville, Qld, Australia;
5.Univ Queensland, Sch Biol Sci, St Lucia, Qld, Australia;
6.Queensland Univ Technol, Sch Math Sci, Brisbane, Qld, Australia;
7.Australian Res Council Ctr Excellence Math & Stat, Brisbane, Qld, Australia;
8.Univ Western Australia, Australian Inst Marine Sci, Indian Ocean Marine Res Ctr, Crawley, WA, Australia;
9.Nature Conservancy, Global Sci, Brunswick, ME USA;
10.Univ Queensland, Sch Biol Sci, Marine Spatial Ecol Lab, St Lucia, Qld, Australia;
11.Univ Copenhagen, Nat Hist Museum Denmark, Ctr Macroecol Evolut & Climate, Copenhagen, Denmark;
12.Dalhousie Univ, Dept Biol, Halifax, NS, Canada
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Mellin, Camille,Matthews, Samuel,Anthony, Kenneth R. N.,et al. Spatial resilience of the Great Barrier Reef under cumulative disturbance impacts[J],2019,25(7):2431-2445.
APA Mellin, Camille.,Matthews, Samuel.,Anthony, Kenneth R. N..,Brown, Stuart C..,Caley, M. Julian.,...&MacNeil, M. Aaron.(2019).Spatial resilience of the Great Barrier Reef under cumulative disturbance impacts.GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY,25(7),2431-2445.
MLA Mellin, Camille,et al."Spatial resilience of the Great Barrier Reef under cumulative disturbance impacts".GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY 25.7(2019):2431-2445.
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