Coral recruitment at a high latitude Pacific site: A comparison with Atlantic reefs

Authors
Citation
Vj. Harriott, Coral recruitment at a high latitude Pacific site: A comparison with Atlantic reefs, B MARIN SCI, 65(3), 1999, pp. 881-891
Citations number
39
Categorie Soggetti
Aquatic Sciences
Journal title
BULLETIN OF MARINE SCIENCE
ISSN journal
00074977 → ACNP
Volume
65
Issue
3
Year of publication
1999
Pages
881 - 891
Database
ISI
SICI code
0007-4977(199911)65:3<881:CRAAHL>2.0.ZU;2-P
Abstract
Reports of coral recruitment in subtropical Australia have indicated low re cruitment rates of broadcast-spawning species, and higher but variable rate s for brooded larvae. Hypotheses have suggested that coral biogeographical patterns and population dynamics on these subtropical reefs are a function of sporadic episodes of high recruitment by tropical coral larvae, on a tim e scale in the order of decades. In a study of coral recruitment in the Sol itary Islands Marine Park in eastern Australia spanning an eight year perio d, recruitment was consistently low at two islands, and low to moderate at another three. Recruitment at each site varied interannually by a factor of four to seven times. For acroporid corals, the dominant broadcast-spawned recruit in tropical eastern Australia, only 34 recruits were recorded from 370 pairs of settlement panels collected over the 8 yrs, indicating either that the temporal scale of recruitment events for this species is greater t han the time scale of the study, or that the local population is maintained by a lower level of recruitment than previously assumed. While the coral r ecruitment rates at the Solitary Islands were low relative to tropical Aust ralian sites, they were comparable with rates reported from both tropical a nd subtropical sites in the western Atlantic Ocean. This suggests that the relatively low levels of larval settlement reported for these sites are suf ficient to maintain coral communities, and that the sporadic episodes of re cruitment of tropical larvae hypothesized for high latitude sites, while po tentially significant biogeographically, are not necessary for population m aintenance.