TY - JOUR
T1 - Recruitment of benthic organisms onto a planned artificial reef
T2 - Shifts in community structure one decade post-deployment
AU - Perkol-Finkel, S.
AU - Benayahu, Y.
N1 - Funding Information:
We express our thanks to “Dubek”, the Israeli tobacco company that generously donated to the construction of the artificial reef. Special thanks are due to A. and H. Gehl who initiated and supported the idea of the project, and the late Ms. Ruth Hirch, general director of the company. Y. Scheterman is acknowledged for his professional help and friendship. We appreciate the helpful comments of the anonymous reviewers, which greatly improved the quality of the manuscript. Dr. N. Shashar, G. Yahel and T. Dagan are acknowledged for fruitful discussions and advice. We are indebted to the following taxonomists for identification of material: J.L. d'Hondt (Bryozoa), F. Monniot (Tunicata) and W. Vervoort (Hydrozoa). We thank the Interuniversity Institute of Eilat for the use of its facilities, Eilat municipality for issue the provision of legal permits, and the Israel Nature and National Parks Protection Authority for logistic assistance. Our thanks to the Tel Aviv University Zoological Museum for the use of the coral reference collection, A. Shlagman for curatorial skills, N. Paz for editorial assistance and V. Wexsler for graphic assistance. The paper constitutes part of M.Sc. thesis submitted by S. Perkol-Finkel. This study was supported in part by a grant to Y.B. (# 6713-00) from the National Geographic Society.
PY - 2005/3
Y1 - 2005/3
N2 - Most artificial reef (AR) studies have examined the early colonization stages of benthic communities, while only a few have monitored the development of AR communities beyond the initial successional phases and evaluated the time scale needed for such development. In addition, despite the proliferation of AR studies, comparative studies between artificial and natural reefs (NRs) are scarce. We present here the monitoring results of initial (1-2 year) and progressed (10 year) stages of the developing benthic communities of a purpose-planned AR submerged at Eilat, Israel (Red Sea), and compare them to its adjacent NR. Visual surveys of macro-invertebrates were conducted on the initial stages and coral communities were characterized at the progressed stage, using belt transects. The results demonstrate a distinct shift in species composition of the AR communities along the monitoring periods: from a soft coral dominated community, comprised mainly of Dendronephthya hemprichi, in initial developmental stages of up to two years post-deployment, to a community dominated by the sponge Crella cyatophora at year 10. Distinct differences in coral species count, living cover and diversity were found between the AR and its neighboring NR. We estimate the time frame required to develop a progressed diverse AR community to be well over a decade, even in tropical ecosystems. The factors shaping the species composition of purpose-designed ARs in a coral reef environment, including structural design, spatial orientation, depth and age, are discussed.
AB - Most artificial reef (AR) studies have examined the early colonization stages of benthic communities, while only a few have monitored the development of AR communities beyond the initial successional phases and evaluated the time scale needed for such development. In addition, despite the proliferation of AR studies, comparative studies between artificial and natural reefs (NRs) are scarce. We present here the monitoring results of initial (1-2 year) and progressed (10 year) stages of the developing benthic communities of a purpose-planned AR submerged at Eilat, Israel (Red Sea), and compare them to its adjacent NR. Visual surveys of macro-invertebrates were conducted on the initial stages and coral communities were characterized at the progressed stage, using belt transects. The results demonstrate a distinct shift in species composition of the AR communities along the monitoring periods: from a soft coral dominated community, comprised mainly of Dendronephthya hemprichi, in initial developmental stages of up to two years post-deployment, to a community dominated by the sponge Crella cyatophora at year 10. Distinct differences in coral species count, living cover and diversity were found between the AR and its neighboring NR. We estimate the time frame required to develop a progressed diverse AR community to be well over a decade, even in tropical ecosystems. The factors shaping the species composition of purpose-designed ARs in a coral reef environment, including structural design, spatial orientation, depth and age, are discussed.
KW - Biodiversity
KW - Colonization
KW - Community shift
KW - Coral reefs
KW - Planned artificial reefs
KW - Red Sea
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=4644307732&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.marenvres.2004.03.122
DO - 10.1016/j.marenvres.2004.03.122
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AN - SCOPUS:4644307732
SN - 0141-1136
VL - 59
SP - 79
EP - 99
JO - Marine Environmental Research
JF - Marine Environmental Research
IS - 2
ER -