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Consumer diversity interacts with prey defenses to drive ecosystem function.

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TLDR
The findings indicate that the total diet breadth of the herbivore community and the probability of all macroalgae being removed from reefs by herbivores increases with increasing Herbivore diversity, but that a few critical species drive this relationship.
Abstract
Prey traits linking consumer diversity to ecosystem function remain poorly understood. On tropical coral reefs, herbivores promote coral dominance by suppressing competing macroalgae, but the roles of herbivore identity and diversity, macroalgal defenses, and their interactions in affecting reef resilience and function are unclear. We studied adjacent pairs of no-take marine reserves and fished areas on reefs in Fiji and found that protected reefs supported 7–17× greater biomass, 2–3× higher species richness of herbivorous fishes, and 3–11× more live coral cover than did fished reefs. In contrast, macroalgae were 27–61× more abundant and 3–4× more species-rich on fished reefs. When we transplanted seven common macroalgae from fished reefs into reserves they were rapidly consumed, suggesting that rates of herbivory (ecosystem functioning) differed inside vs. outside reserves. We then video-recorded feeding activity on the same seven macroalgae when transplanted into reserves, and assessed the functional redundancy vs. complementarity of herbivorous fishes consuming these macroalgae. Of 29 species of larger herbivorous fishes on these reefs, only four species accounted for 97% of macroalgal consumption. Two unicornfish consumed a range of brown macroalgae, a parrotfish consumed multiple red algae, and a rabbitfish consumed a green alga, with almost no diet overlap among these groups. The two most chemically rich, allelopathic algae were each consumed by a single, but different, fish species. This striking complementarity resulted from herbivore species differing in their tolerances to macroalgal chemical and structural defenses. A model of assemblage diet breadth based on our feeding observations predicted that high browser diversity would be required for effective control of macroalgae on Fijian reefs. In support of this model, we observed strong negative relationships between herbivore diversity and macroalgal abundance and diversity across the six study reefs. Our findings indicate that the total diet breadth of the herbivore community and the probability of all macroalgae being removed from reefs by herbivores increases with increasing herbivore diversity, but that a few critical species drive this relationship. Therefore, interactions between algal defenses and herbivore tolerances create an essential role for consumer diversity in the functioning and resilience of coral reefs.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Coral reef disturbance and recovery dynamics differ across gradients of localized stressors in the Mariana Islands.

TL;DR: This study examined coral reefs in the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands across a 12-year period that included elevated Crown-of-Thorns Starfish densities and tropical storms that were drivers of spatially-inconsistent disturbance and recovery patterns, concluding that COTS densities were the strongest drivers of coral decline.
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Spatial and temporal limits of coral-macroalgal competition: the negative impacts of macroalgal density, proximity, and history of contact

TL;DR: Macroalgal impacts were density dependent, occurred only if macroalgae were in close contact, and coral growth was resilient to prior macroalgal contact, which suggests that corals may be surprisingly resilient to periodic Macroalgal competition.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rehabilitation of coral reefs through removal of macroalgae: state of knowledge and considerations for management and implementation

TL;DR: A review of available knowledge of the ecological role of macroalgae on coral reefs and the potential benefits and risks associated with their active removal has been presented in this article, where the authors synthesize available knowledge about the ecological roles of macro algae in coral reef ecosystems and propose a management tool to reduce competition between algae and corals and provide space for coral recruitment.
Journal ArticleDOI

A budget of algal production and consumption by herbivorous fish in an herbivore fisheries management area, Maui, Hawaii

TL;DR: Estimating the budget for fleshy algal growth and herbivorous fish consumption on a Hawaiian coral reef based upon integration of field-measured and taxonomically specific variables indicated that the production and consumption budget for Kahekili could become balanced in future with continued management.
Journal ArticleDOI

Macroalgal browsing on a heavily degraded, urbanized equatorial reef system

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors surveyed roving herbivorous fish communities and quantified their capacity to remove the dominant macroalga Sargassum ilicifolium on seven reefs in Singapore; a heavily degraded urbanized reef system.
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Journal ArticleDOI

Confronting the coral reef crisis

TL;DR: The ecological roles of critical functional groups (for both corals and reef fishes) that are fundamental to understanding resilience and avoiding phase shifts from coral dominance to less desirable, degraded ecosystems are reviewed.
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