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      Community change and evidence for variable warm-water temperature adaptation of corals in Northern Male Atoll, Maldives.

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          Abstract

          This study provides a descriptive analysis of the North Male, Maldives seven years after the 1998 bleaching disturbance to determine the state of the coral community composition, the recruitment community, evidence for recovery, and adaptation to thermal stress. Overall, hard coral cover recovered at a rate commonly reported in the literature but with high spatial variability and shifts in taxonomic composition. Massive Porites, Pavona, Synarea, and Goniopora were unusually common in both the recruit and adult communities. Coral recruitment was low and some coral taxa, namely Tubipora, Seriatopora, and Stylophora, were rarer than expected. A study of the bleaching response to a thermal anomaly in 2005 indicated that some taxa, including Leptoria, Platygyra, Favites, Fungia, Hydnophora, and Galaxea astreata, bleached as predicted while others, including Acropora, Pocillopora, branching Porites, Montipora, Stylophora, and Alveopora, bleached less than predicted. This indicates variable-adaptation potentials among the taxa and considerable potential for ecological reorganization of the coral community.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Mar. Pollut. Bull.
          Marine pollution bulletin
          Elsevier BV
          1879-3363
          0025-326X
          Mar 15 2014
          : 80
          : 1-2
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Wildlife Conservation Society, Marine Programs, Bronx, NY, United States. Electronic address: tmcclanahan@wcs.org.
          [2 ] Wildlife Conservation Society, Marine Programs, Bronx, NY, United States.
          Article
          S0025-326X(14)00036-8
          10.1016/j.marpolbul.2014.01.035
          24486038
          fef9ab7c-dd8c-425f-bfd1-fafc0be9d657
          History

          Adaptive bleaching hypothesis,Disturbance,Global climate change,Indian Ocean,Life histories

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