Influence of aggregation on benthic coral reef spatio-temporal dynamics

Spatial patterning of coral reef sessile benthic organisms can constrain competitive and demographic rates, with implications for dynamics over a range of time scales. However, techniques for quantifying and analysing reefscape behaviour, particularly at short to intermediate time scales (weeks to d...

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Main Authors: Marlene Brito-Millán, B. T. Werner, Stuart A. Sandin, Dylan E. McNamara
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2019-02-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.181703
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spelling doaj-380acb303ec34aa3ae7c1b4e7a793c652020-11-25T04:10:00ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032019-02-016210.1098/rsos.181703181703Influence of aggregation on benthic coral reef spatio-temporal dynamicsMarlene Brito-MillánB. T. WernerStuart A. SandinDylan E. McNamaraSpatial patterning of coral reef sessile benthic organisms can constrain competitive and demographic rates, with implications for dynamics over a range of time scales. However, techniques for quantifying and analysing reefscape behaviour, particularly at short to intermediate time scales (weeks to decades), are lacking. An analysis of the dynamics of coral reefscapes simulated with a lattice model shows consistent trends that can be categorized into four stages: a repelling stage that moves rapidly away from an unstable initial condition, a transient stage where spatial rearrangements bring key competitors into contact, an attracting stage where the reefscape decays to a steady-state attractor, and an attractor stage. The transient stage exhibits nonlinear dynamics, whereas the other stages are linear. The relative durations of the stages are affected by the initial spatial configuration as characterized by coral aggregation—a measure of spatial clumpiness, which together with coral and macroalgae fractional cover, more completely describe modelled reefscape dynamics. Incorporating diffusional processes results in aggregated patterns persisting in the attractor. Our quantitative characterization of reefscape dynamics has possible applications to other spatio-temporal systems and implications for reef restoration: high initial aggregation patterns slow losses in herbivore-limited systems and low initial aggregation configurations accelerate growth in herbivore-dominated systems.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.181703aggregationcoral–algaetime scalestransient dynamicspattern formationstate space
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marlene Brito-Millán
B. T. Werner
Stuart A. Sandin
Dylan E. McNamara
spellingShingle Marlene Brito-Millán
B. T. Werner
Stuart A. Sandin
Dylan E. McNamara
Influence of aggregation on benthic coral reef spatio-temporal dynamics
Royal Society Open Science
aggregation
coral–algae
time scales
transient dynamics
pattern formation
state space
author_facet Marlene Brito-Millán
B. T. Werner
Stuart A. Sandin
Dylan E. McNamara
author_sort Marlene Brito-Millán
title Influence of aggregation on benthic coral reef spatio-temporal dynamics
title_short Influence of aggregation on benthic coral reef spatio-temporal dynamics
title_full Influence of aggregation on benthic coral reef spatio-temporal dynamics
title_fullStr Influence of aggregation on benthic coral reef spatio-temporal dynamics
title_full_unstemmed Influence of aggregation on benthic coral reef spatio-temporal dynamics
title_sort influence of aggregation on benthic coral reef spatio-temporal dynamics
publisher The Royal Society
series Royal Society Open Science
issn 2054-5703
publishDate 2019-02-01
description Spatial patterning of coral reef sessile benthic organisms can constrain competitive and demographic rates, with implications for dynamics over a range of time scales. However, techniques for quantifying and analysing reefscape behaviour, particularly at short to intermediate time scales (weeks to decades), are lacking. An analysis of the dynamics of coral reefscapes simulated with a lattice model shows consistent trends that can be categorized into four stages: a repelling stage that moves rapidly away from an unstable initial condition, a transient stage where spatial rearrangements bring key competitors into contact, an attracting stage where the reefscape decays to a steady-state attractor, and an attractor stage. The transient stage exhibits nonlinear dynamics, whereas the other stages are linear. The relative durations of the stages are affected by the initial spatial configuration as characterized by coral aggregation—a measure of spatial clumpiness, which together with coral and macroalgae fractional cover, more completely describe modelled reefscape dynamics. Incorporating diffusional processes results in aggregated patterns persisting in the attractor. Our quantitative characterization of reefscape dynamics has possible applications to other spatio-temporal systems and implications for reef restoration: high initial aggregation patterns slow losses in herbivore-limited systems and low initial aggregation configurations accelerate growth in herbivore-dominated systems.
topic aggregation
coral–algae
time scales
transient dynamics
pattern formation
state space
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.181703
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