Published November 28, 2018 | Version v1
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Data from: Simultaneous synergist, antagonistic, and additive interactions between multiple local stressors all degrade algal turf communities on coral reefs

  • 1. University of California Los Angeles

Description

1.Ecological communities are subjected to multiple anthropogenic stressors at both global and local scales that are increasing in number and magnitude. Stressors can interact in complex ways, and are classified as additive, synergistic, or antagonistic; the nature of the interaction is key to predicting changes and understanding community resilience. Coral reefs are among the most impacted communities and have shifted from coral- to algal-dominated states, and overfishing, nutrient enrichment, and sedimentation are local stressors that often co-occur and may support degraded algal states. Short algal turfs are abundant benthic space-holders on healthy reefs that may be pushed by local stressors to long algal turfs, a more degraded state that may prevent recovery to coral dominance. 2. We conducted a fully crossed 3-factor field experiment on short algal turf communities manipulating herbivory pressure (+/-cages), nutrients (+/-fertilizer), and sediments (natural accumulation/removal). We applied stressors for 16 days, removed them, and monitored turf height during and after manipulations. 3.We found significant pair-wise interactions between all stressors pushed the community toward a degraded state with longer algal turfs. All three types of interactions (additive, synergistic, and antagonistic) were common and occurred in equal frequency, suggesting more investigations into all types are needed to accurately predict community responses to multiple stressors. For example, when herbivores were present nutrients and sediments interacted additively while in the absence of herbivores, nutrients and sediments interacted synergistically. All interactions broke down following termination of experimental manipulations and all effects were undetectable after 49 days, indicating this reef may be resilient, at least when stressors are applied on a short time scale. 4.Synthesis. Because management of local stressors is often more tractable than global stressors, local management has been proposed as a means to offset global stressors. However, ecological communities often experience multiple local stressors simultaneously, and interactions between stressors, including synergisms and antagonisms, may be the source of non-linear shifts in communities or 'ecological surprises'. The majority of interactions in our study were both strong and non-linear and we suggest that, if pervasive across systems, non-linear interactions may drive the recent global increase in 'ecological surprises'.

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Is cited by
10.1111/1365-2745.12914 (DOI)