Benthic cyanobacterial mat formation during severe coral bleaching at Lizard Island: The mediating role of water currents

Authors: Sterling Tebbett, Robert Streit, Juliano Morais, Jodie Schlaefer, Sam Swan & David Bellwood

Abstract:

Cyanobacterial mats are increasingly recognised as a symptom of coral reef change. However, the spatial distribution of cyanobacterial mats during coral bleaching has received limited attention. We explored cyanobacterial mat distribution during a bleaching event at Lizard Island and considered hydrodynamics as a potential modifier. During bleaching cyanobacterial mats covered up to 34% of the benthos at a transect scale, while some quadrats (1 m²) were covered almost entirely (97.5%). The spatial distribution of cyanobacterial mats was limited to areas with slower water currents. Coral cover declined by 44% overall, although cyanobacterial mats were not spatially coupled to the magnitude of coral loss. Overall, the marked increase in cyanobacterial mat cover was an ephemeral spike, not a sustained change, with cover returning to 0.4% within 6 months. Cyanobacterial mats clearly represent dynamic space holders on coral reefs, with a marked capacity to rapidly exploit change, if conditions are right.

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On the fate of dead coral colonies

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Occurrence and accumulation of heavy metals in algal turf particulates and sediments on coral reefs