Clearing a path to resilience: removal of dead coral skeletons mitigates
downstream impacts of coral bleaching
Abstract
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Ecological disturbance regimes are shifting and leaving behind novel
legacies, like the remnant structures of dead foundation species, which
have poorly known impacts on ecosystem resilience. We explored how dead
coral skeletons produced by marine heatwaves–material legacies of
increasingly common disturbances on coral reefs–influence spatial
competition between corals and macroalgae. Following a heatwave, we
removed dead skeletons from reef patches then used photogrammetry and
AI-powered image analysis to quantify trajectories of coral and
macroalgae. Skeleton removal yielded 60% more live coral and 50% less
macroalgae relative to patches with skeletons left intact. Dead
skeletons facilitated macroalgae development, and greater macroalgal
abundance caused steeper declines in live coral. Lastly, removing
skeletons stimulated four times more coral recruitment onto stable reef
substrate. Our findings identify a promising avenue to manage for coral
reef resilience and reveal how material legacies can alter physical
environments to sway the outcomes of spatial competition.