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UM Study Provides New Insights into Deeper Reefs


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    In a new study, UM researchers compare bioerosion on deeper reef systems to better understand long-term structural sustainability.

    Researcher David Weinstein recovers experimental coral substrates for the bioerosion study at midpath reef site.

    Researcher David Weinstein recovers experimental coral substrates for the bioerosion study.

    MIAMI – A new University of Miami study of mesophotic tropical coral reefs, which are low-energy reef environments between 30 to 150 meters deep, provides new insights into the differences in bioerosion rates and the distribution of fish, mollusks, sponges, and other bioeroding organisms in mesophotic reefs and their shallow-water counterparts. The study explores the implications of those variations on the sustainability of the reef structure.

    Due to major advancements in deeper underwater diving technology, renewed interest in mesophotic reefs has pulsed through the scientific community because of the deeper reefs’ high biodiversity, vast extent, and potential refuge for shallower water reef species at risk from the impacts of climate change.

    “Studying how mesophotic reefs function and thrive is especially critical now, when considering results from the new IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) report reviewed by over 1,700 expects said that coral reefs are the most vulnerable marine ecosystems on earth to the adverse effects of climate change,” said David Weinstein, a Ph.D. candidate at the Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science and lead author of the study, now available online in the journal Geomorphology.

    “Developing effective environmental management strategies for these important reef systems requires a basic fundamental understanding of the underlining architecture that supports and creates diverse biological ecosystems.”

    Weinstein and his research team used previously identified mesophotic reefs in the U.S. Virgin Islands that are at 30 to 50 meters deep and composed of a surprising number of coral growing atop different types of reef structures (patches, linear banks, basins). Their aim was to better understand the role sedimentary processes play in creating and maintaining the variety of structures that are critical for maximizing the biodiversity and health of the ecosystem. The researchers analyzed coral rubble and coral skeleton discs collected after one and two years of exposure to determine the sources and rates of bioerosion at these reefs.

    They found that architecturally unique structures in the study area experience significantly different bioerosion rates.

    “This has very important implications when trying to predict how these reefs will grow over time and where preservation efforts might be most effective,” said Weinstein.

    Although erosion of the coral skeleton disks at the very deepest sites was more uniform, the researchers suggest that this is likely because the substrates used in the study were all of uniform composition, unlike the diverse composition of the sites. These results imply that bioerosional processes at these depths still exaggerate differences in reef structure depending on the amount of living and dead coral at each reef, the amount of time that material is exposed on the surface, and different localized current flows experienced.

    The study also confirmed important concepts in coral geology research that lacked proof from studies venturing deeper than 35 meters. Coral reef bioerosion in the U.S. Virgin Islands and potentially in most of the Caribbean generally decreases with depth. This result stems from the finding that parrotfish are now the most significant bioeroding group from shallow reefs down to a mesophotic reef transition zone identified by Weinstein at 30 to 35 meters in depth.

    The study also concluded that bioeroding sponges are the primary organisms responsible for long-term structural modification of mesophotic reefs beyond the transitional zone.

    “Coral reefs are essentially a thin benthos veneer draped upon a biologically produced inorganic three-dimensional foundation that creates habitats for many marine organisms,” said Weinstein. “Since mesophotic reefs grow so much slower than shallower reefs, identifying the sources and rate of erosion on mesophotic reefs is even more important to understand the long-term structural sustainability of these tropical reefs systems.”

    However, Weinstein suggests that other processes, such as coral growth rates and cementation, must also be more fully studied before scientists have a complete understanding of mesophotic coral reefs.

    The paper, which is also slated for print in a special coral reef edition of Geomorphology, is one of the first to address mesophotic reef sedimentology.

    More information, videos, pictures, and new developments can be found at the UM Mesophotic Geology Lab  website and on Facebook.

     

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