When environmental factors become stressors: Interactive effects of vermetid gastropods and sedimentation on corals

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Abstract

Environmental stressors often interact, but most studies of multiple stressors have focused on combinations of abiotic stressors.Herewe examined the potential interaction between a biotic stressor, the vermetid snail Ceraesignum maximum, and an abiotic stressor, high sedimentation, on the growth of reefbuilding corals. In a field experiment, we subjected juvenile massive Porites corals to four treatments: (i) neither stressor, (ii) sedimentation, (iii) vermetids or (iv) both stressors. Unexpectedly, we found no effect of either stressor in isolation, but a significant decrease in coral growth in thepresence of both stressors. Additionally, seven times more sediment remained on corals in the presence (versus absence) of vermetids, likely owing to adhesion of sediments to corals via vermetid mucus. Thus, vermetid snails and high sedimentation can interact to drive deleterious effects on reef-building corals. More generally, our study illustrates that environmental factors can combine to have negative interactive effects even when individual effects are not detectable. Such 'ecological surprises' may be easily overlooked, leading to environmental degradation that cannot be anticipated through the study of isolated factors.

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Zill, J. A., Gil, M. A., & Osenberg, C. W. (2017). When environmental factors become stressors: Interactive effects of vermetid gastropods and sedimentation on corals. Biology Letters, 13(3). https://doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2016.0957

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