Rain forests of the sea??
Bob Steneck
Steneck at maine.maine.edu
Thu May 25 22:38:07 UTC 2000
Coral folk,
It's all relative but both rainforests and coral reefs are unique and
probably worthy of the sound-bite analogy. Both concentrate diversity,
have complex habitat architecture and are highly productive (high gross
productivity). Species richness and canopy heights are greater in
rainforests, gross productivity is greater on reefs. Taxonomic
composition differs significantly. In rain forests most species are
insects, angiosperms and birds. Reefs have no marine insects, hardly any
angiosperms and certainly no birds. However, reefs have much greater
higher-order diversity (e.g., number of phyla). While there is a wider
phyletic range of primary producers (endosymbionts, plankton and multiple
phyla of benthic algae) the within group diversity for each is relatively
low. For example, species richness in algae is much lower than that for
angiosperms, reef fish are less diverse than rainforest birds. There are
low diversity reefs (e.g., Clipperton in the eastern Pacific, Abrolhos
off Brazil and Hawaii) that have many of the same zones, groups and
ecosystem function of high diversity reefs. I don't know of low
diversity rainforests - this may reveal my ignorance.
Coral reefs may be most unique because of their role in producing
calcium carbonate bioherms (reef rock). In a relatively short period of
time, say 500 or 1000 years, they can significantly change their physical
environment as they grow to and reach sea level.
Finally, both ecosystems are globally threatened. Would it be useful
to consider the rates of change in these two ecosystems? Reefs in the
Caribbean have lost much of their largest framework building corals (the
acroporids). Are there rainforest analogs? Are the two systems equally
resilient to perturbations?
Just some food for thought.
Cheers,
Bob Steneck
>Dear Coral List,
>
> One of Jim Hendee's recent messages reminded me that one of the
>legitimate items for the coral list is "controversial topics in coral
>reef ecology".
>
> I am not sure that this is a 'controversial topic', but the
>coral list has been pretty quiet lately. Are coral reefs really
>analogous to rain forests or is the coral reef community just taking
>advantage of a catchy 'sound bite' to gain status in the eyes of the
>ecologically minded public?
>
> There are certainly some similarities, but I have often thought
>that the differences are large also. Anybody care to share their
>thoughts on this topic with the list??
>
>John
-------------------------------
Robert S. Steneck, Ph.D.
Professor, School of Marine Sciences
Pew Fellow in Marine Conservation
University of Maine
Darling Marine Center
Walpole, ME 04573
(207) 563 - 3146 ext. 233
e-mail: Steneck at Maine.EDU
The School of Marine Sciences Web site:
http://www.ume.maine.edu/~marine/index.html
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