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Heatwaves Hit Phase Shift Coral Reefs

SSRN Electronic Journal(2022)

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摘要
Phase shift is characterized by an abrupt change in the structure of a community in response to a disturbance that can break its resistance, displacing it from its natural variation. This phenomenon has been recognized in several ecosystems and often point to human activities as the cause. However, reactions of communities in phase shift to anthropogenic impacts have been less studied. In recent decades, heatwaves resulting from climate change have strongly affected coral reefs. Mass coral bleaching events are recognized as the main cause of coral reefs phase shifts on a global scale. In 2019, an unprecedented heatwave hit the southwest Atlantic Ocean causing mass coral bleaching in non-degraded reefs and reefs in phase shift of Todos os Santos Bay, at an intensity never recorded in a 34-year historical series. We analyzed the effects of this event on the resistance of reefs in phase shift, dominated by the zoanthid Palythoa cf. variabilis . Using benthic coverage data from 2003, 2007, 2011, 2017 and 2019, we analyzed three non-degraded reefs and three in phase shift. We compared estimated coverage and bleaching of corals and P. cf. variabilis on each reef. There was a reduction in coral coverage in non-degraded reefs before the 2019 mass bleaching event (i.e., heatwave). However, there was no significant coral coverage variation after the event and the structure of non-degraded reefs communities did not change. In reefs in phase shift the coverage of zoanthids did not change significantly before the 2019 event, however, after the mass bleaching, there was a significant reduction in the coverage of these organisms. Here we revealed that the resistance of the community in phase shift was broken, and its structure was altered, indicating that reefs in this condition were more susceptible to bleaching disturbance than non-degraded reefs.
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