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publications > paper > permanent 'phase shifts' or reversible declines in coral cover? lack of recovery of two coral reefs in St. John, US Virgin Islands

Permanent 'phase shifts' or reversible declines in coral cover? Lack of recovery of two coral reefs in St. John, US Virgin Islands

Caroline S. Rogers1, Jeff Miller2

1US Geological Survey Caribbean Field Station, 1300 Cruz Bay Creek, St. John, US Virgin Islands 00830
2National Park Service, 1300 Cruz Bay Creek, St. John, US Virgin Islands 00830

Reprinted from Marine Ecology Progress Series, Volume 306, Caroline S. Rogers, Jeff Miller, Permanent 'phase shifts' or reversible declines in coral cover? Lack of recovery of two coral reefs in St. John, US Virgin Islands, Pages 103-114, Copyright 2006, posted with permission from Inter-Research Science Publisher. Entire paper is available from the Marine Ecology Progress Series journal website (journal membership required).

Reprints of the article are available from the author. Contact Caroline S. Rogers.

Abstract

Caribbean coral reefs have changed dramatically in the last 3 to 4 decades, with significant loss of coral cover and increases in algae. Here we present trends in benthic cover from 1989 to 2003 at 2 reefs (Lameshur Reef and Newfound Reef) off St. John, US Virgin Islands (USVI). Coral cover has declined in the fore-reef zones at both sites, and no recovery is evident. At Lameshur Reef, Hurricane Hugo (1989) caused significant physical damage and loss of coral. We suggest that macroalgae rapidly colonized new substrate made available by this storm and have hindered or prevented growth of adult corals, as well as settlement and survival of new coral recruits. Overfishing of herbivorous fishes in the USVI and loss of shelter for these fishes because of major storms has presumably reduced the levels of herbivory that formerly controlled algal abundance. Coral cover declined at Newfound Reef from 1999 to 2000, most likely because of coral diseases. The trends that we have documented, loss of coral followed by no evidence of recovery, appear similar to findings from other studies in the Caribbean. We need to focus on functional shifts in the resilience of coral reefs that result in their inability to recover from natural and human-caused stressors.



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Last updated: 06 April, 2006 @ 03:31 PM(KP)