2022
DOI: 10.21425/f5fbg57427
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The Habitat Persistence Hypothesis: a new perspective on the distribution of coral-reef organisms

Abstract: Highlights• A novel hypothesis is presented to account for patterns of geographic distribution of marine organisms inhabiting both shallow and deep coralreef habitats.

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Cited by 7 publications
(9 citation statements)
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References 133 publications
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“…The presence of A. glomerata in its current diversity of habitats suggests the possibility of being a persistent species with a long diversification period in Hawai'i, using certain parts of its range during periods of climactic variability. Specifically, the species exhibits strong population structure and further mesophotic sampling should be undertaken to assess whether population expansion has also occurred in this more stable habitat (Copus et al 2022). Haplotypes containing samples collected from mesophotic depths in Hawai'i are almost always shared with identical shallow water samples, an indication the mesophotic may act as a refugia for the species (Bongaerts et al 2010;Hinderstein et al 2010;Bongaerts & Smith 2019;Pyle & Copus 2019).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The presence of A. glomerata in its current diversity of habitats suggests the possibility of being a persistent species with a long diversification period in Hawai'i, using certain parts of its range during periods of climactic variability. Specifically, the species exhibits strong population structure and further mesophotic sampling should be undertaken to assess whether population expansion has also occurred in this more stable habitat (Copus et al 2022). Haplotypes containing samples collected from mesophotic depths in Hawai'i are almost always shared with identical shallow water samples, an indication the mesophotic may act as a refugia for the species (Bongaerts et al 2010;Hinderstein et al 2010;Bongaerts & Smith 2019;Pyle & Copus 2019).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Amansia glomerata exhibits shared haplotypes across the mesophotic-shallow threshold and exceptional diversity in the archipelago, following several of the hypotheses suggested by Copus et al . (2022) as the habitat persistence hypothesis. The presence of A. glomerata in its current diversity of habitats suggests the possibility of being a persistent species with a long diversification period in Hawai‘i, using certain parts of its range during periods of climactic variability.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The DRRH has strong implications for conservation, under the premise that MCEs can host remnant communities during sea level changes in the long term (e.g. Copus, Pyle, et al, 2022), and protect populations from disturbance in the short term. Our findings invoke a more nuanced view of MCEs as refuges.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition to the issue of depth‐based biotic zonation, another outstanding question concerns the degree to which MCEs may act as refugia for shallow‐water taxa (Bongaerts et al, 2010). Due to their depth and remoteness, MCEs may be more stable and less prone to disturbance (both natural and anthropogenic) than shallow reefs on both ecological and evolutionary timescales (Bongaerts et al, 2010; Copus, Pyle, et al, 2022), and thus able to reseed extirpated shallow taxa. Key assumptions of the deep reef refugia hypothesis (DRRH) are that (i) the species composition of MCEs is similar to shallow reefs; (ii) there is exchange of individuals or propagules between deep and shallow reefs; and (iii) deep reefs are more resilient or less impacted than their shallow counterparts.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%