Space-filling and benthic competition on coral reefs

Open Access
Authors
  • E.E. George
  • J.A. Mullinix
  • F. Meng
  • B.A. Bailey
  • C. Edwards
  • B. Felts
  • A.F. Haas
  • A.C. Hartmann
  • B. Mueller ORCID logo
  • T.N.F. Roach
  • P. Salamon
  • C. Silveira
  • M.J.A. Vermeij ORCID logo
  • F. Rohwer
  • A. Luque
Publication date 19-06-2021
Journal PeerJ
Article number e11213
Volume | Issue number 9
Number of pages 25
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics (IBED)
Abstract

Reef-building corals are ecosystem engineers that compete with other benthic organisms for space and resources. Corals harvest energy through their surface by photosynthesis and heterotrophic feeding, and they divert part of this energy to defend their outer colony perimeter against competitors. Here, we hypothesized that corals with a larger space-filling surface and smaller perimeters increase energy gain while reducing the exposure to competitors. This predicted an association between these two geometric properties of corals and the competitive outcome against other benthic organisms. To test the prediction, fifty coral colonies from the Caribbean island of CuraƧao were rendered using digital 3D and 2D reconstructions. The surface areas, perimeters, box-counting dimensions (as a proxy of surface and perimeter space-filling), and other geometric properties were extracted and analyzed with respect to the percentage of the perimeter losing or winning against competitors based on the coral tissue apparent growth or damage. The increase in surface space-filling dimension was the only significant single indicator of coral winning outcomes, but the combination of surface space-filling dimension with perimeter length increased the statistical prediction of coral competition outcomes. Corals with larger surface space-filling dimensions (Ds > 2) and smaller perimeters displayed more winning outcomes, confirming the initial hypothesis. We propose that the space-filling property of coral surfaces complemented with other proxies of coral competitiveness, such as life history traits, will provide a more accurate quantitative characterization of coral competition outcomes on coral reefs. This framework also applies to other organisms or ecological systems that rely on complex surfaces to obtain energy for competition.

Document type Article
Note With supplementary materials
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.11213
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85109143291
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peerj-11213 (Final published version)
Supplementary materials
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