Role of Herbivory in Controlling the Coral-Algal Phase Shift on Nutrient Impacted Reefs

Jessica Fry

Tropical Coastal Management MSc, University of Newcastle-Upon-Tyne

May-June 2004

 

Aim and rationale:

A recent study of the water quality around Tobago has shown that sewage derived nutrients are impacting all the reef systems (Lapointe et al., 2002) and results seem to indicate that this pollution is the cause of increased algal growth (“top-down”). However as yet, no one as quantified the value of herbivory as a factor in regulating algal cover (“bottom-up”) and therefore one of the importance’s of the no-fishing zone in the Buccoo Reef Marine Park. This project evaluates the generality of the association between algal cover and herbivore biomass on Caribbean reefs (Williams & Polunin, 2001), in an area of high nutrient input, aiding the ongoing debate between ‘bottom-up’ versus ‘top-down’ controls on algal population growth on coral reefs.

Methods:

Seven sites around the Buccoo Reef Complex were surveyed using SCUBA, with a minimum of 5 replicas at each site. Three sites were on inshore reefs and four were on outer reefs.

Each survey consisted of a stationary underwater visual census of all herbivorous fish (parrotfish and surgeonfish) within a cylinder of 5m radius, for a duration of 5 minutes, the species were recorded and their size was estimated to the nearest 5cm. The survey area was thoroughly searched for all species of sea urchins.

Each survey also involved an estimation of the benthic community composition; this involved estimating the % cover of different categories of benthic organisms within a 25cm2 quadrat at eight specified locations within the survey area. For any coral within the quadrat the height, diameter, water depth, % recently dead and long dead was also noted. All macro-algae was harvested from two randomly selected quadrats per survey, when present, and its dry weight calculated.

 

 

Photos

1. Underwater survey methods (photo taken by Richard Langton, 2004)

 

2. School of herbivorous striped parrotfish (Scarus iserti) (photo taken by Richard Langton, 2004)

 

 

Initial findings (full report to follow later)

The outer reef sites had a significantly higher cover of hard coral and proportion of the total algae in a cropped state (sum of turf algae, bare substrate and crustose-coralline algae), and a lower cover of macroalgae and calcareous algae, the fish and coral diversity was also significantly higher on the outer reef sites. The reef was generally healthier further offshore and limited water nutrient testing revealed a nutrient gradient, with high phosphate levels close to Buccoo village and lower readings offshore. The biomass of all herbivorous fish did vary significantly between survey sites and did not correlate significantly with the benthic community.

This therefore suggests “bottom-up” control of the benthic community, whereby an increase in growth-promoting nutrients, especially phosphorus, in nearshore waters from land-based pollution fuels rapid, explosive macroalgal growth.

However, the parrotfish biomass and urchin abundance did correlate strongly with the benthic community; positively with the proportion of the total algae in a cropped state and negatively with the macroalgae (% cover and biomass), suggesting that parrotfish and urchin communities play an important role in structuring the benthic community, more so than surgeonfish.

Although correlation doesn’t imply causality these findings are consistent with other reports in the Caribbean and do suggests “top-down” control of the algae community, where grazing by both herbivorous fish and sea urchins can influence the algal community compositions.

Management implications

In conclusion, both nutrient and herbivory play essential roles in determining the benthic community composition on the reef, and therefore both aspects must be managed carefully. It is important to keep the herbivore population protected, since low populations, especially of parrotfish, lead to high macroalgae levels and lower coral cover, which in turn reduces the spatial complexity of reef, leading to a lack of refuge and further decreasing the fish populations, and hence there could be definite benefits of the proposed Reef Balls programme.

The research will become an additional layer for the Buccoo Reef Trusts Geographic Information System database and will provide baseline information for future monitoring efforts. This is particularly important since the Tobago House of Assembly and the Central Government of Trinidad and Tobago are reaching the final stages in negotiations with the Inter-American Development Bank to fund the re-sewering of southwest Tobago, which will greatly reduce the nutrient inputs to the Buccoo Reef.

Possible future areas of work

·         How the nutrient status of the water affects corals susceptibility or immunisation against diseases?

·         Are the Diadema antillarum populations are recovering?

·         Are the elevated nutrient concentrations causing a community switch to zooanthid and fire coral dominance?

·         What is the influence of reef topography on herbivore populations?

 

Acknowledgements:

I would like to thank all of the following for their help, support and advice;

All the staff of The Buccoo Reef Trust, especially Dr Richard Langton and Dr Owen Day; all the staff of R & Sea Divers, Crown Point, Tony Melville, Jackie Wilson, Tracey Kearns, John Austin, Wendy Austin, Leslie Peters and Michelle Alleyne ; the boat captains, Julian Johnson, Karen Johnson, Dunston Johnson and Leron Lezama; Dive Masters Dan Wurzbacher and Chris Cole; The staff of the University of Newcastle Department of Coastal Management, particularly Martin LeTissier, Jeremy Hills, John Bythell, Nick Polunin; Erol Caesar, the Fisheries Officer of the Department of Marine Resources and Fisheries; and Garvin Nichols for his support in Trinidad.

This project was approved and supported by the Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers); endorsed and supported by the Newcastle University Expeditions Committee on behalf of the University Scholarships Committee; supported (in part) by funds from the Project AWARE Foundation; and supported by the National Environmental Research Council and the Cambridge Round Table.