Coral reefs around the world are under increasing stress due to a combination of local and global factors. As such, long-term investigation is becoming increasingly important to understanding ecosystem responses.
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Soft coral are now dominating large areas of the shadow reef which in 1928 had many species of hard corals too [Credit: Professor Maoz Fine, Bar-Ilan University] |
"This is a unique opportunity to look at long-term changes on an inshore reef system," said author Prof. Hoegh-Guldberg from the University of Queensland. "Most studies are only a few decades in length - this one is just short of 100 years of study."
In 1928 the Great Barrier Reef Committee and the Royal Society of London sent an expedition to study the Great Barrier Reef. Members of the expedition, pioneers in coral biology and reef studies, lived on Low Isles for over a year. During this time they documented environmental conditions surrounding the coral reefs of the Low Isles, as well as the community structure of tidal and subtidal communities, using, for the first time, a diving helmet.
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The reef-flat at the Low Isles, which was covered with living branching Acropora corals in 1928 is now mostly dead [Credit: Professor Maoz Fine, Bar-Ilan University] |
Members of the expedition produced aerial photography-based mapping of the island. This highly-accurate mapping enabled researchers in the current study to follow in their footsteps and revisit and sample the exact intertidal and subtidal locations previously explored 76, 87 and 91 years later, thereby forming the longest ecological survey to date.
In the latest investigation, carried out in three phases in 2004, 2015 and 2019, researchers discovered that intertidal communities have experienced major phase-shifts over nearly a century. Species richness and diversity of these communities systematically declined for corals and other invertebrates. Specifically, massive corals have replaced branching corals, and soft corals have become much more numerous.
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These are patches of branching Acropora corals during low tide at Low Isles [Credit: Professor Maoz Fine, Bar-Ilan University] |
Coral reefs are highly sensitive to environmental change. Multiple stressors, in isolation or in combination, may lead to dramatic deterioration that can result in loss of reefs and their ecological services for many years. In the future the researchers hope to use the same methods to reconstruct data from other parts of the world where historical expeditions accurately documented similar communities.
Source: Bar-Ilan University [September 27, 2019]
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