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Episodic Eruptions of Volcanic Ash Trigger a Reversible Cascade of Nuisance Species Outbreaks in Pristine Coral Habitats

Overview of attention for article published in PLOS ONE, October 2012
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Title
Episodic Eruptions of Volcanic Ash Trigger a Reversible Cascade of Nuisance Species Outbreaks in Pristine Coral Habitats
Published in
PLOS ONE, October 2012
DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0046639
Pubmed ID
Authors

Tom Schils

Abstract

Volcanically active islands abound in the tropical Pacific and harbor complex coral communities. Whereas lava streams and deep ash deposits are well-known to devastate coral communities through burial and smothering, little is known about the effect of moderate amounts of small particulate ash deposits on reef communities. Volcanic ash contains a diversity of chemical compounds that can induce nutrient enrichments triggering changes in benthic composition. Two independently collected data sets on the marine benthos of the pristine and remote reefs around Pagan Island, Northern Mariana Islands, reveal a sudden critical transition to cyanobacteria-dominated communities in 2009-2010, which coincides with a period of continuous volcanic ash eruptions. Concurrently, localized outbreaks of the coral-killing cyanobacteriosponge Terpios hoshinota displayed a remarkable symbiosis with filamentous cyanobacteria, which supported the rapid overgrowth of massive coral colonies and allowed the sponge to colonize substrate types from which it has not been documented before. The chemical composition of tephra from Pagan indicates that the outbreak of nuisance species on its reefs might represent an early succession stage of iron enrichment (a.k.a. "black reefs") similar to that caused by anthropogenic debris like ship wrecks or natural events like particulate deposition from wildfire smoke plumes or desert dust storms. Once Pagan's volcanic activity ceased in 2011, the cyanobacterial bloom disappeared. Another group of well-known nuisance algae in the tropical Pacific, the pelagophytes, did not reach bloom densities during this period of ash eruptions but new species records for the Northern Mariana Islands were documented. These field observations indicate that the study of population dynamics of pristine coral communities can advance our understanding of the resilience of tropical reef systems to natural and anthropogenic disturbances.

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Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
Germany 2 2%
Indonesia 1 1%
Chile 1 1%
Ecuador 1 1%
Saudi Arabia 1 1%
Taiwan 1 1%
Mexico 1 1%
Belgium 1 1%
United States 1 1%
Other 0 0%
Unknown 77 89%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Student > Ph. D. Student 18 21%
Researcher 16 18%
Student > Master 14 16%
Student > Bachelor 6 7%
Other 6 7%
Other 13 15%
Unknown 14 16%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 31 36%
Environmental Science 24 28%
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology 5 6%
Earth and Planetary Sciences 5 6%
Chemistry 3 3%
Other 5 6%
Unknown 14 16%