Coral Reefs: 1999
Publications
Author:
Wesseling, I, Uychiaoco, A.J., Alino, P.M., Aurin, T., and
Vermaat, J.E.
Title: Damage and recovery of four Philippine corals
from short-term sediment burial.
Publication: Marine Ecology Progress Series
176: 11-15, 1999.
© Inter-Research
Notes:
Recovery of corals after full burial with littoral sediment
(16 % silt, 46 % fine sand and 38 % coarse sand; 28 % CaCO3) was
monitored in 2 field experiments at the reefs off Lucero, Bolinao
(Pangasinan, NW Philippines), from April to May 1996. In the first
experiment at 2 m depth. Porites was buried for 0, 6, 20 and 68 h;
a second experiment was done at 5 m depth and 4 common taxa
(Porites, Galaxea, Heliopora and
Acropora) were buried for 20 h. At 2 m depth,
Porites was not affected by 6 h burial compared to the
controls that were not buried. Increasing burial time had
increasingly more serious effects. Burial for 20 h resulted in
increased discoloration of the coral tissue. After 68 h of burial,
up to 90 % of the tissue bleached in the first days. About 50 % of
this tissue disappeared subsequently and bare coral skeleton
became exposed or were covered with algae. After a few weeks,
however, recovery took place: the bare areas were recolonized from
surrounding surviving tissue or from highly retracted polyps in
the affected area. In the corals that had been buried for 20 h no
more significant differences from the controls were observed after
3 wk. For those that were buried for 68 h, this was the case after
4 wk. At 5 m depth, all Acropora died after the 20 h burial
treatment, but the other taxa recovered in a comparable way to the
Porites in the first experiment at 2 m depth. It is
concluded that complete burial will cause considerable
whole-colony mortality in at least Acropora, and thus may
result in a permanent loss of coral taxa from reefs that are
subject to such intense sedimentation events. Less sensitive taxa
incur substantial damage but significant recovery was observed
after a month.
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