Impacts of water quality on Acropora coral settlement: The relative importance of substrate quality and light

Coral larval settlement patterns are influenced by a vast array of factors; however, the relative roles of individual factors are rarely tested in isolation, leading to confusion about which are most crucial for settlement. For example, direct effects of the light environment are often cited as a ma...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe Science of the total environment Vol. 777; p. 146079
Main Authors Ricardo, Gerard F., Harper, Charlotte E., Negri, Andrew P., Luter, Heidi M., Abdul Wahab, Muhammad Azmi, Jones, Ross J.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier B.V 10.07.2021
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Summary:Coral larval settlement patterns are influenced by a vast array of factors; however, the relative roles of individual factors are rarely tested in isolation, leading to confusion about which are most crucial for settlement. For example, direct effects of the light environment are often cited as a major factor influencing settlement patterns, yet this has not been demonstrated under environmentally realistic lighting regimes in the absence of confounding factors. Here we apply programmable multispectral lights to create realistic light spectra, while removing correlating (but not obvious) factors that are common in laboratory settlement experiments. Using two common species of Acropora – key framework builders of the Great Barrier Reef – we find little evidence that light intensity or changes in the spectral profile play a substantial role in larval settlement under most environmentally realistic settings but can under more extreme or artificial settings. We alternatively hypothesise and provide evidence that chronic light conditions and recent sediment exposures that impact benthic substrates (e.g., crustose coralline algae) have a greater impact on settlement success. Under these conditions, there was a decrease of up to 74% settlement success. Management of water quality conditions that impact the quality of benthic-settlement substrates therefore should present a priority area of focus for improving coral recruitment. [Display omitted] •Light intensity and realistic spectral changes had limited impact on coral settlement success.•Monochromatic/artificial light exposures led to changes in settlement at higher wavelengths.•Substrates conditioned under various water quality exposures had a greater impact on coral settlement.
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ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.146079