Anthropogenic Impacts on Coral-Algal Interactions of the Subtropical Lagoonal Reef, Norfolk Island
M L Ho, C Page, B Leggat, T Gaston, S Eckhardt, T Ainsworth

TL;DR
This study examines how human-caused disturbances affect coral-algal interactions on a subtropical reef in Norfolk Island, showing that algal blooms may signal ecosystem decline.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into coral-algal interaction dynamics and their link to anthropogenic stressors in a subtropical reef system.
Findings
Significant seasonal blooms of red cyanobacteria and Lyngbya were observed, indicating ecosystem stress.
Lyngbya interactions with Pocillopora damicornis were highest at Slaughter Bay, suggesting localized environmental impacts.
PAM fluorometry showed potential influence of algal interactions on coral photochemical efficiency.
Abstract
Reef building corals are important in subtropical marine ecoregions, shaping ecosystems and providing habitats for fish and benthic species. Algal communities contribute substantially to the benthic population structure across subtropical coral reefs, however increasing algal cover on subtropical reefs is also linked to degraded ecosystems as has been shown on tropical systems. As such, the dynamics of coral-algal interactions on subtropical reefs are also likely to be an indicator of ecosystem health on subtropical ecosystems. The subtropical lagoonal coral reef of Norfolk Island within the Norfolk Marine Park has been impacted by a regime of disturbance since 2020 including flooding, sedimentation, and heat stress events. Assessing the type and extent of algal interactions with the dominant coral Pocillopora damiconis within the reef sites of Emily Bay, Slaughter Bay, and Cemetery Bay…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCoral and Marine Ecosystems Studies · Marine and coastal plant biology · Marine and fisheries research
