Coral Reefs: 2000
Publications
Author:
Holmes, K.E.
Title: Effects of eutrophication on bioeroding
sponge communities with the description of new West Indian
sponges, Cliona spp. (Porifera: Hadromerida: Clionidae).
Publication: Invertebrate Biology 119(2):
125-138, 2000
© Taylor & Francis
Notes: Pieces
of coral rubble (Porites porites), collected from across 3
fringing reefs that lie along a eutrophication gradient, were
examined for the presence of clionid sponges. A similarity
analysis of species composition showed that reef zone had less
effect on clionid community composition than did other factors
affecting the reefs as a whole. Except on the back reef, the
zones, distances, and depths within the reefs had no significant
influence on the number of clionid invasions. Reef comparisons
demonstrated that clionid abundance increased with increasing
eutrophication. Clionids were found in 41% of the pieces collected
from the most eutrophic site vs. 24% from the least eutrophic.
Because clionids are the principal bioeroders of coral reefs, any
increase in their abundance will likely result in greater
bioerosion rates. The mean abundance of Type 3 corals (in which
fragmentation is the primary mode of propagation) is positively
related to the frequency of boring sponge invasion, suggesting
that increased bioerosion may be partly responsible for community
shifts toward Type 3 corals in polluted waters. Cliona cf.
vastifica, found for the first time in Barbados, flourishes
on the most eutrophic reef and may become an important bioeroder
under the highly eutrophic conditions that have begun to plague
West Indian reefs. Two new species of Cliona (Porifera:
Hadromerida: Clionidae) are described.
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