Posts Tagged ‘Pavona’

Acropora Gardens

Monday, February 11th, 2013

February 11, 2013

Written by Dr. Andrew Bruckner

Mangareva contains more diverse coral habitats than anything we have seen to date. Parts of the outside rim of the atoll are emergent. The cross sectional profile starts with a classic reef flat, 10 m wide in places and often extending more than 100 m from shore with small spillways connecting the lagoon and fore reef.  At the seaward edge of the reef flat is a reef crest, where reef growth is vigorous.  An extensive build-up of steep spurs. These project into the prevailing waves and are separated by narrow, deep channels.  At the seaward edge, the slope plunges steeply to depths of 50 m or more.  More than half of Mangareva is surrounded by a submerged barrier reef, 4-5 m deep at its shallowest point, with high wave energy and strong currents.  The submerged barrier also has a characteristic “spur and groove” formation.  The spurs here are much longer and wider and slope more gradually, stretching for 100s of meters between the lagoon and the deep reef.

Lagoonal reefs

Lagoonal reefs

 

Inside the lagoon are lagoonal fringing reefs, patch reefs, coral pinnacles, reticulate reefs, and an extensive deep water coral-encrusted lagoonal floor. Unlike other lagoonal habitats we have explored, vigorous coral growth occurs at the water’s surface, and many of the corals are periodically exposed at low tide.

Lagoonal acroporids exposed at low tide

Lagoonal acroporids exposed at low tide

 

Coral growth extends down the pinnacles, spurs or mounds to the lagoonal floor (25-30 m deep), and a deep coral framework on the lagoon floor supports a proliferant coral community to depths of 40 m or more.

Diverse acropora

Diverse Acropora

 

The shallowest part of the lagoonal reef has the highest diversity of corals, especially the genus known as Acropora.  These acroporids take on a myriad of shapes and sizes: colonies have antler-like branches, low stumpy fingers, large flattened tables, thin, spindly branches, crusts, finely branched bushes, feathery spirals, bottlebrushes and more. They also can be yellow, brown, fluorescent blue, lime green, greyish white, red, or other colors of the rainbow.  They are unique among corals in that they possess two very different types of animals or polyps – most posses a single a very large tubular “axial” polyp on each branch and hundreds of smaller radial polyps.  These produce a very unique skeletal structure (known as corallite), which is used to help identify the species.  The corallite is basically a tube divided into six or twelve partitions (called septa).  Some of these corallites are tubular with round opening, some are pocket shaped, some resemble an earlobe and others look like an upside down nose.

Deep water plates of Montipora

Deep water plates of Montipora

 

We found dozens of species of acroporids on shallow lagoonal reefs, but these tend to occur in small clumps.  As you go deeper, the clumps get larger, often forming vast single species thickets tens to hundreds of meters in length.  This group and other corals also showed a very characteristic distribution or zonation pattern.  One table forming coral that was rare or absent in all other locations we have examined thus far in French Polynesia, formed vast stands at intermediate depths (5-10 m).  Below this, tall, thinly branched staghorn-type acroporids dominated.

Staghorn coral

Staghorn coral

 

Still deeper, the acroporids become less common and piles of free living mushroom corals (Fungia, Herpolitha, Sandolitha) coexist- hundreds may accumulate in a very small area, most the size and shape of a large dinner plate.

Piles of fungiid corals

Piles of fungiid corals

 

Still deeper, corals form delicate plates, rarer species like the elephant nose coral (Mycedium), lettuce corals (Pavona and Leptoceris), and foliaceous Montipora. Often the base of the reef had massive colonies of Pore coral – individual colonies were 3-4 m in diameter or larger.

Rare deep water plate of Mycedium

Rare deep water plate of Mycedium

 

Perhaps most interesting, each lagoonal reef had a different structure and a different assemblage of corals. One of the biggest challenges we face is understanding why.

(Photos by: Dr. Andrew Bruckner)

Reefs Around Rangiroa, Aratika and Raraka

Thursday, November 29th, 2012

November 28, 2012

Written by Dr. Andy Bruckner

After two weeks, we’ve completed reef assessments around Rangiroa, Aratika, and Raraka and are now examining Fakarava. Tuamotu reefs are dramatically different from Society Islands.  Besides the near absence of crown of thorns seastars (we’ve seen a handful in the lagoon), there is much more living coral, a higher diversity of coral species, and more diverse and abundant fish communities.

Shallow fore reef (5 m) on the leeward side of Fakarava with a high cover of plating and submassive Porites colonies and other species

Shallow fore reef (5 m) on the leeward side of Fakarava with a high cover of plating and submassive Porites colonies and other species

 

On the fore reef, dense assemblages of branching corals begin near the shore and extend down the slope to 5-10 m, becoming mixed and gradually dominated by larger boulder and plating corals at 10-20 m depth, followed by shingles of pore corals (Porites) and overlapping sheets of plating pore corals and lettuce corals (Porites & Pachyseris) on the fore reef slope, from 20-30 m and deeper.

Foliose sheets of ruffled lettuce coral (Pachyseris speciosa) at 30 m depth at Raraka

Foliose sheets of ruffled lettuce coral (Pachyseris speciosa) at 30 m depth at Raraka

 

These outer reefs vary considerably in species composition, with windward reefs having a mix of stout, bushy and tree-like corals (Acropora), branching cauliflower coral (Pocillopora), finger corals (Porites) and small massive faviid corals, and leeward reefs being dominated by Porites, plates of rice coral (Montipora), small boulders of star coral (Favia), and columns of Pavona coral.

Large thicket of Pacific elkhorn coral (Acropora clathrata) on an exposed shallow reef off Raraka

Large thicket of Pacific elkhorn coral (Acropora clathrata) on an exposed shallow reef off Raraka

 

The amount of coral varies at each site, with some completely covered in coral, some having fewer corals and a lot of fleshy algae, especially carpets of feather-like and grape-like green algae (Caulerpa) and mats of lettuce algae (Microdictyon), and some with large accumulations of rubble between patches of living coral.

Two species of macroalgae (Caulerpa racemosa and C. sertuloides) carpeting the reef substrate. Two branching rice corals (Montiopora) and red crustose coralline algae are visible. Scale bare is 90 cm.

Two species of macroalgae (Caulerpa racemosa and C. sertuloides) carpeting the reef substrate. Two branching rice corals (Montipora) and red crustose coralline algae are visible. Scale bare is 90 cm.

 

Lagoonal reefs are built on a framework of massive boulders of Porites.  Sites close to the cut (the channel connecting the fore reef to the lagoon) had a lot of live coral – unusually large helmet or dome-shaped colonies Porites (some over 5 meters across), and a mix of branching, plating, encrusting and foliose corals. Sites with less water exchange (e.g. closer to the center of the lagoon) often were covered in fleshy algae and had little coral, except near the water’s surface.

Typical Lagoonal patch reef in Rangiroa with unusually large Porites colonies and Pocillopora colonies

Typical lagoonal patch reef in Rangiroa with unusually large Porites colonies and Pocillopora colonies

 

Unraveling the cause of these differences is one part of the puzzle. We know that the same species of coral can look completely different on two reefs, changing shape depending on depth, amount of light, wave exposure and other environmental and biological factors.

Coral community on the top of a lagoonal pinnacle at 2 m depth

Coral community on the top of a lagoonal pinnacle at 2 m depth

 

For instance, we often see massive, mountainous boulders of Porites in sheltered shallow areas and these same species form plates or overlapping shingles in deeper water to maximize the amount of their surface exposed to sunlight.  On windward reefs, branching corals often had thick bases, short digitate or tree-like branches and colonies  spread out laterally, close to the bottom, with branches facing into the current to minimize chances of breakage. These stout, bushy corals exist in areas of high wave exposure because they spread through fragmentation, with broken branches settling on the bottom, reattaching and regrowing into a new colony.  In protected waters of the lagoon, branching species were more fragile, forming bottlebrush colonies, tangles of thin, erect branches, and bushes.

A broken colony of cauliflower coral (Pocillopora eydouxi) on a shallow wave-exposed for reef in Aratika. The branches are still alive and have fused to the bottom.

A broken colony of cauliflower coral (Pocillopora eydouxi) on a shallow wave-exposed for reef in Aratika. The branches are still alive and have fused to the bottom.

 

Determining why some reefs are healthier than others is another part of the puzzle. Even though coral cover is much higher, there are many more larger, older corals than we had observed in Society Islands, human populations are much smaller here, and certain species have been found with disease much more frequently.  We typically find a number of dead cauliflower corals (Pocillopora), in growth position, which we also saw in Society Islands, but these were primarily corals that had been eaten by crown of thorns starfish (COTS).  In Tuamotu, we’ve found very few recently dead corals that were eaten by COTS, but a high percentage (up to 10%) have recently dead (white) patches.  This is presumably a disease called white syndrome, but we know very little about its cause.

Pocillopora colonies with recent tissue loss due to white syndrome. The top colony is dead and show older mortality (reddish branches) and recent mortality. The other two corals have live tissue, recently dead white skeleton, and older dead patches colonized by algae.

Pocillopora colonies with recent tissue loss due to white syndrome. The top colony is dead and show older mortality (reddish branches) and recent mortality. The other two corals have live tissue, recently dead white skeleton, and older dead patches colonized by algae.

 

During each survey, I measure the size of all corals (healthy and diseased), and record how much of the coral is live, long dead (covered in algae), recently dead (white), and, when possible, identify why they have died.  We’ve also sampled some of the diseased corals to better understand the effects of the disease, in hopes of identifying a cause.

At least for now, the disease does not appear to be having a major impact on these reefs. As these species are a dominant corals on the fore reefs of Tuamotu, they exhibit very high rates of replacement, and they are considerably larger in size than what we saw in Society Islands.

(Photos by: Dr. Andy Bruckner)

Life, Death and Rebirth of a Coral Reef

Saturday, September 29th, 2012

September 28, 2012

Written by Dr. Andy Bruckner

What comes to mind when thinking about a coral reef is a colorful undersea garden teaming with life: corals, fish, urchins, starfish,  molluscs, crustaceans, sponges and other animals and plants, many still unknown to science.  Coral reefs in French Polynesia should provoke similar perceptions.  French Polynesia is very remote. Total human population is low. Many of the atolls are uninhabited and pressures on the reef are minimal.  French Polynesia has vast areas of barrier reefs and fringing reefs encircling the more than 80 atolls (out of about 450 worldwide!), deep-water lagoons crowded with patch reefs, and extensive coral dominated reef flat communities (more than 6000 sq km of coral reefs).  The reefs are home to more than 800 species of fish, about 170 species of corals, over 1100 species of molluscs, hundreds of other invertebrates, and 350 species of algae.

Shallow (7 m) reef community on the fore reef at Mopelia

Shallow (7 m) reef community on the fore reef at Mopelia

Read the rest of Life, Death and Rebirth of a Coral Reef »

Corals in the Devil’s Crown

Tuesday, June 12th, 2012

June 11, 2012

After just one dive at San Cristobal Island, the team decided the water was too rough, so the Golden Shadow moved on. We woke Monday to overcast skies at Floreana, the southernmost of the five inhabited islands. Monday brought three dives at the Corona del Diablo, the “Devil’s Crown,” a ring of jagged rocks on the island’s south side formed by a partially submerged basalt volcanic cone. Strong currents sweep around and through the formation, which is only a few meters deep inside and full of life.

Pocillopora coral

The coral seemed to be recovering here, including large stands of Pavona and Porites, one of which was four meters by two meters. Outside of the crown we found some Pocillopora, a few Cycloseris colonies, which are very rare, and extensive beds of both Psammocora and Diaseris, each stretching for over a hundred meters. This was the first time we had found Diaseris alive, in abundance. Sea turtles, rays, a school of barracuda and multiple parrotfish over two feet long all made appearances.

Read the rest of Corals in the Devil’s Crown »

GRE Website YouTUBE Channel Follow on Facebook Follow on Twitter RSS Feed Updates LOF Website

Search

Calendar

May 2013
M T W T F S S
« Apr    
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  

Archives