Abstract

Reduced fishing pressure and weak predator–prey interactions within marine reserves can create trophic cascades that increase the number of grazing fishes and reduce the coverage of macroalgae on coral reefs. Here, we show that the impacts of reserves extend beyond trophic cascades and enhance the process of coral recruitment. Increased fish grazing, primarily driven by reduced fishing, was strongly negatively correlated with macroalgal cover and resulted in a 2-fold increase in the density of coral recruits within a Bahamian reef system. Our conclusions are robust because four alternative hypotheses that may generate a spurious correlation between grazing and coral recruitment were tested and rejected. Grazing appears to influence the density and community structure of coral recruits, but no detectable influence was found on the overall size-frequency distribution, community structure, or cover of corals. We interpret this absence of pattern in the adult coral community as symptomatic of the impact of a recent disturbance event that masks the recovery trajectories of individual reefs. Marine reserves are not a panacea for conservation but can facilitate the recovery of corals from disturbance and may help sustain the biodiversity of organisms that depend on a complex three-dimensional coral habitat.

Keywords

Coral reefMarine reserveTrophic cascadeParrotfishResilience of coral reefsCoralReefTrophic levelEcologyAquaculture of coralEnvironmental issues with coral reefsBiologyMarine protected areaCoral bleachingCoral reef protectionFisheryCoral reef fishCommunity structureFishingGrazing pressureHabitatGrazingFood web

MeSH Terms

AnimalsAnthozoaBiodiversityConservation of Natural ResourcesEukaryotaFishesFood ChainLarvaModelsBiologicalPredatory Behavior

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

What was natural in the coastal oceans?

Humans transformed Western Atlantic coastal marine ecosystems before modern ecological investigations began. Paleoecological, archeological, and historical reconstructions demon...

2001 Proceedings of the National Academy o... 530 citations

The future of coral reefs

Coral reefs, with their millions of species, have changed profoundly because of the effects of people, and will continue to do so for the foreseeable future. Reefs are subject t...

2001 Proceedings of the National Academy o... 585 citations

Publication Info

Year
2007
Type
article
Volume
104
Issue
20
Pages
8362-8367
Citations
392
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

392
OpenAlex
25
Influential

Cite This

Peter J. Mumby, Alastair R. Harborne, Jodene Williams et al. (2007). Trophic cascade facilitates coral recruitment in a marine reserve. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences , 104 (20) , 8362-8367. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0702602104

Identifiers

DOI
10.1073/pnas.0702602104
PMID
17488824
PMCID
PMC1895955

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%