ORCID
- Reverter, Miriam: 0000-0002-7743-8647
Abstract
As coral reef communities change and reorganise in response to increasing disturbances, there is a growing need for understanding species regimes and their contribution to ecosystem processes. Using a case study on coral reefs at the epicentre of tropical marine biodiversity (North Sulawesi, Indonesia), we explored how application of different biodiversity approaches (i.e., use of major taxonomic categories, high taxonomic resolution categories and trait-based approaches) affects the detection of distinct fish and benthic communities. Our results show that using major categories fails to identify distinct coral reef regimes. We also show that monitoring of only scleractinian coral communities is insufficient to detect different benthic regimes, especially communities dominated by non-coral organisms, and that all types of benthic organisms need to be considered. We have implemented the use of a trait-based approach to study the functional diversity of whole coral reef benthic assemblages, which allowed us to detect five different community regimes, only one of which was dominated by scleractinian corals. Furthermore, by the parallel study of benthic and fish communities we provide new insights into key processes and functions that might dominate or be compromised in the different community regimes.
DOI
10.1038/s41598-021-95905-8
Publication Date
2021-08-16
Publication Title
Scientific Reports
Volume
11
Issue
1
ISSN
2045-2322
Embargo Period
2023-08-16
Organisational Unit
School of Biological and Marine Sciences
Recommended Citation
Reverter, M., Jackson, M., Rohde, S., Moeller, M., Bara, R., Lasut, M., Segre, R., & Schupp, P. (2021) 'High taxonomic resolution surveys and trait-based analyses reveal multiple benthic regimes in North Sulawesi (Indonesia)', Scientific Reports, 11(1). Available at: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-95905-8