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The past, present, and future of coral reef growth in the Florida Keys.
Toth, Lauren T; Courtney, Travis A; Colella, Michael A; Kupfner Johnson, Selena A; Ruzicka, Robert R.
Afiliação
  • Toth LT; U.S. Geological Survey, St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center, St. Petersburg, Florida, USA.
  • Courtney TA; Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California, USA.
  • Colella MA; Department of Marine Sciences, University of Puerto Rico Mayagüez, Mayagüez, Puerto Rico.
  • Kupfner Johnson SA; Fish & Wildlife Research Institute, Florida Fish & Wildlife Conservation Commission, St. Petersburg, Florida, USA.
  • Ruzicka RR; U.S. Geological Survey, St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center, St. Petersburg, Florida, USA.
Glob Chang Biol ; 28(17): 5294-5309, 2022 09.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35789026
ABSTRACT
Coral-reef degradation is driving global-scale reductions in reef-building capacity and the ecological, geological, and socioeconomic functions it supports. The persistence of those essential functions will depend on whether coral-reef management is able to rebalance the competing processes of reef accretion and erosion. Here, we reconstructed census-based carbonate budgets of 46 reefs throughout the Florida Keys from 1996 to 2019. We evaluated the environmental and ecological drivers of changing budget states and compared historical trends in reef-accretion potential to millennial-scale baselines of accretion from reef cores and future projections with coral restoration. We found that historically, most reefs had positive carbonate budgets, and many had reef-accretion potential comparable to the ~3 mm year-1 average accretion rate during the peak of regional reef building ~7000 years ago; however, declines in reef-building Acropora palmata and Orbicella spp. corals following a series of thermal stress events and coral disease outbreaks resulted in a shift from positive to negative budgets for most reefs in the region. By 2019, only ~15% of reefs had positive net carbonate production. Most of those reefs were in inshore, Lower Keys patch-reef habitats with low water clarity, supporting the hypothesis that environments with naturally low irradiance may provide a refugia from thermal stress. We caution that our estimated carbonate budgets are likely overly optimistic; comparison of reef-accretion potential to measured accretion from reef cores suggests that, by not accounting for the role of nonbiological physical and chemical erosion, census-based carbonate budgets may underestimate total erosion by ~1 mm year-1 (-1.15 kg CaCO3 m-2 year-1 ). Although the present state of Florida's reefs is dire, we demonstrate that the restoration of reef-building corals has the potential to help mitigate declines in reef accretion in some locations, which could allow some key ecosystem functions to be maintained until the threat of global climate change is addressed.
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Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Antozoários / Recifes de Corais Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2022 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Antozoários / Recifes de Corais Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2022 Tipo de documento: Article