4.7 Review

Benthic pattern formation in shallow tropical reefscapes: does grazing explain grazing halos?

Journal

LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY
Volume 36, Issue 6, Pages 1605-1620

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10980-021-01239-1

Keywords

Bioturbation; Grazing; Halos; Nutrients; Seascape; Food webs

Funding

  1. Wake Forest University Center for Energy, Environment, and Sustainability [2018-007]
  2. Wake Forest University Biology Department

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Species interactions generating consistent landscape or seascape patterns are important to ecosystem health and function. Sand halos in tropical reefscapes have been attributed to herbivory, but grazing alone cannot explain patterns at all locations. Combining nutrients and grazing, along with factors such as fish and invertebrate bioturbators, provides a more comprehensive understanding of the complex underlying causes of these patterns.
Context Species interactions generating consistent landscape or seascape patterns are important to ecosystem health and function. One widely-documented pattern in shallow, tropical reefscapes is sand halos that separate coral patches from surrounding vegetation. Multiple hypotheses for this pattern have been proposed, but individual explanations are rarely integrated to reflect the complexity of systems where halos occur. Objectives To evaluate and synthesize multiple hypotheses of halo formation and maintenance into a single model, connect the halo pattern with similar terrestrial phenomena, and identify targets to guide future research and conservation. Methods We reviewed halo accounts from over fifty years in the scientific literature and combined them with related research on marine nutrients, bioturbation, analogous terrestrial processes, and new field measurements to create a conceptual model of halo formation and maintenance. Results Though halos are widely attributed to herbivory, grazing alone cannot explain patterns at all locations. Nutrients have large effects on tropical reefscapes but remain understudied for halos. Coupling nutrients and grazing explains a variety of observed halo patterns. Fish and invertebrate bioturbators also appear important. We combine these factors to explain pattern variability and present a framework for more comprehensive halo research. Conclusions Explanations for halos to date have been overly simplistic. Halos are common patterns with complex underlying causes, including foraging behavior and nutrient cycling. Not all halo-like patterns may be created or maintained by the same mechanism(s). Our integrated model provides a more complete understanding of factors contributing to these patterns, a framework for ecological interpretations, and a guide for conservation.

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