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Coral assemblages at higher latitudes favour short-term potential over long-term performance

Abstract:
The persistent exposure of coral assemblages to more variable abiotic regimes is assumed to augment their resilience to future climatic variability. Yet, while the determinants of coral population resilience across species remain unknown, we are unable to predict the winners and losers across reef ecosystems exposed to increasingly variable conditions. Using annual surveys of 3171 coral individuals across Australia and Japan (2016-2019), we explore spatial variation across the short- and long-term dynamics of competitive, stress-tolerant, and weedy assemblages to evaluate how abiotic variability mediates the structural composition of coral assemblages. We illustrate how, by promoting short-term potential over long-term performance, coral assemblages can reduce their vulnerability to stochastic environments. However, compared to stress-tolerant, and weedy assemblages, competitive coral taxa display a reduced capacity for elevating their short-term potential. Accordingly, future climatic shifts threaten the structural complexity of coral assemblages in variable environments, emulating the degradation expected across global tropical reefs
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1002/ecy.4138

Authors



Publisher:
Wiley
Journal:
Ecology More from this journal
Volume:
104
Issue:
9
Article number:
e4138
Publication date:
2023-07-30
Acceptance date:
2023-06-15
DOI:
EISSN:
1939-9170
ISSN:
0012-9658


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
1452300
Local pid:
pubs:1452300
Deposit date:
2023-06-20

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