4.1 Article

Sublittoral seaweed communities on natural and artificial substrata in a high-latitude coral community in South Africa

Journal

AFRICAN JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE
Volume 38, Issue 3, Pages 303-316

Publisher

NATL INQUIRY SERVICES CENTRE PTY LTD
DOI: 10.2989/1814232X.2016.1196727

Keywords

benthic algae; coral bleaching; dead coral; Lobophora variegata; macroalgae; non-geniculate coralline algae; recruitment; Sodwana Bay

Funding

  1. African Coelacanth Ecosystem Programme (ACEP), project 'Integrated biodiversity and process study of African coelacanths and their ecosystems'
  2. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Cape Town
  3. South African National Research Foundation (NRF)
  4. Department of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries

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Coral mortality may result in macroalgal proliferation or a phase shift into an alga-dominated state. Subtidal, high-latitude western Indian Ocean coral communities at Sodwana Bay on the KwaZulu-Natal coast, South Africa, have experienced some mortality because of warm-water anomalies, storms and other causes, but the response of the macroalgae is unknown. We investigated the abundance and diversity of benthic algae on different hard natural substrata (dead digitate, brain and plate corals and beach rock) on Two-Mile Reef, Sodwana Bay. We also compared algal communities colonising ceramic, marble and pretreated ceramic tiles placed on the reef for six months. We identified 95 algae (14 Chlorophyta, 11 Phaeophyceae, 69 Rhodophyta and one cyanobacterium). Assemblages on natural and artificial substrata were dominated by the brown alga Lobophora variegata (Lamouroux) Womersley ex Oliveira and non-geniculate corallines (Rhodophyta, Corallinaceae). Cluster and ordination analyses revealed that the algae showed no affinity for particular substrata, whether natural or artificial. Algal cover was occasionally higher on rougher tiles and crustose corallines were significantly more abundant on marble than ceramic tiles. Two-Mile Reef had 23.1% dead and 48.4% live scleractinian coral cover, where dead corals were colonised indiscriminately by many small algal species, but there was no evidence of algal proliferation. The results provide a baseline for monitoring this high-latitude reef system.

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