2018
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2435.13247
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Changing geo‐ecological functions of coral reefs in the Anthropocene

Abstract: The ecology of many coral reefs has changed markedly over recent decades in response to various combinations of local and global stressors. These ecological changes have important implications for the abundance of taxa that regulate the production and erosion of skeletal carbonates, and thus for many of the geo‐ecological functions that coral reefs provide, including reef framework production and sediment generation, the maintenance of reef habitat complexity and reef growth potential. These functional attribu… Show more

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Cited by 131 publications
(152 citation statements)
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References 89 publications
(170 reference statements)
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“…consumption rate per individual), to provide an overall estimate of the magnitude of a function over a unit area (e.g. rates of grazing on reefs or bioerosion m −2 ) (Bellwood et al, ; Graham et al, ; Perry & Alvarez‐Filip, ). The advantage of this approach is that functional impacts can be estimated at an individual, population, species, functional group or community level and can be expressed as a rate‐based process in terms of its spatial impact (function per unit area).…”
Section: A Critical Evaluation Of Functional Traits: Implications Formentioning
confidence: 99%
“…consumption rate per individual), to provide an overall estimate of the magnitude of a function over a unit area (e.g. rates of grazing on reefs or bioerosion m −2 ) (Bellwood et al, ; Graham et al, ; Perry & Alvarez‐Filip, ). The advantage of this approach is that functional impacts can be estimated at an individual, population, species, functional group or community level and can be expressed as a rate‐based process in terms of its spatial impact (function per unit area).…”
Section: A Critical Evaluation Of Functional Traits: Implications Formentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In particular, acidification tends to increase coral reef bioerosion, preventing effective reef accretion (Barkley et al, ), and this may be further accentuated by higher nutrients (e.g., due to increases in current‐driven upwelling; Schaeffer, Roughan, & Wood, ), which can impair coral skeletal density and limit reef construction (Manzello et al, ). This suggests that high latitude coral‐dominated reefs of the future may not form accreting reef frameworks (Perry & Alvarez‐Filip, ), and this may limit associated biodiversity. Ocean acidification may also limit corals by enhancing the competitive strength of turf and seaweeds generally (Connell & Russell, ; Diaz‐Pulido, Gouezo, Tilbrook, Dove, & Anthony, ) and of kelp in particular (Linares et al, ).…”
Section: Predicted Impacts To Biodiversity Ecosystem Functions and Sermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Globally, human‐induced warming of the ocean is resulting in increasingly frequent mass coral bleaching events (Hughes, Anderson et al, ) that are transforming coral assemblages (Hughes, Kerry et al, ) and in some cases causing regime shifts to fleshy macroalgae (Graham, Jennings, MacNeil, Mouillot, & Wilson, ). In combination with human‐induced ocean acidification (Albright et al, ), these shifts in benthic composition have broader ecosystem effects, from compromising the growth of reef structures (Perry & Alvarez‐Filip, ; Perry et al, ) to changing the diversity, abundance and behaviour of other reef‐associated organisms (Keith et al, ; Richardson, Graham, Pratchett, Eurich, & Hoey, ; Stuart‐Smith, Brown, Ceccarelli, & Edgar, ). Hence, myriad interconnected human drivers are rapidly changing the structure and function of reefs (Pendleton, Hoegh‐Guldberg, Langdon, & Comte, ).…”
Section: Socioeconomic and Cultural Drivers: A New Reality For Coral mentioning
confidence: 99%