Quantifying spatial gradients in coral reef benthic communities using multivariate dispersion

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Electronic versions

Documents

Tropical coral reefs are dynamic, disturbance-driven ecosystems that are heterogeneous across space and time, partly due to gradients in cross-scale human impacts and natural environmental factor. Localised management interventions which strive to maintain the long-term persistence and function of coral reefs need to be informed by how and why reef habitats vary. Using the ‘multivariate dispersion’ metric, a statistical approach to measure ecological community variability, we quantified spatial gradients in coral reef benthic communities around Tutuila Island in American Samoa, central South Pacific. Benthic communities with low, medium, and high dispersion each had distinct and consistent underlying benthic community characteristics. Low dispersion sites were consistently characterised by high hard coral cover, medium dispersion sites were generally dominated by crustose coralline algae, while high dispersion sites were dominated by turf and fleshy coralline algae. Variability in hard coral and turf algal cover explained 42 % of the underlying variation in benthic community dispersion across sites, while site-level gradients in human impacts and environmental factors did not correlate well with variations in benthic community dispersion. The metric should be further tested on temporal data to determine whether it can summarise complex community changes in response to and following acute disturbance.

Keywords

  • American Samoa, benthic heterogeneity, betadisper, community variability, coral life history, coral species
Original languageEnglish
JournalRoyal Society Open Science
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 23 Jan 2025

Total downloads

No data available
View graph of relations