Benthic mud content is a strong indicator of coral cover and ecosystem recovery on turbid coral reefs
Turbid coral reefs are characterised by high turbidity and sedimentation. However, the impacts of terrestrial sediment inputs on coral communities, as well as their interactions with reef-derived carbonate sediment, remain poorly understood. Here we examine the physical properties of mixed carbonate...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1823532025-01-28T15:38:17Z Benthic mud content is a strong indicator of coral cover and ecosystem recovery on turbid coral reefs Joppien, Marlena Morgan, Kyle Asian School of the Environment Earth Observatory of Singapore Earth and Environmental Sciences Turbid reefs Sedimentation Bioclastic sediment Reef recovery Southeast Asia Ecosystem stability Turbid coral reefs are characterised by high turbidity and sedimentation. However, the impacts of terrestrial sediment inputs on coral communities, as well as their interactions with reef-derived carbonate sediment, remain poorly understood. Here we examine the physical properties of mixed carbonate-siliciclastic benthic sediments from six turbid reefs in southern Singapore, which exhibit coral covers ranging from 15 % to 65 %. Coral was the dominant contributor to sand and gravel sediment on reefs (mean ± SE: 57 ± 1 %), followed by molluscan grains (21 ± 1 %). Mud content ranged from 0 to 26 % between sites and there was a positive correlation (r = 0.4) between terrigenous mud and coral-derived sand, while coral cover significantly decreased with increasing mud. Results suggest that losses in coral cover may initially cause an increase in bioclastic carbonate sediment as the reef structure degrades. However, long-term declines in coral cover will ultimately reduce sediment supply, as live coral sources diminish on reefs. Our findings highlight the importance of mitigating high sediment loads on coral reefs, even within naturally turbid environments, to ensure continued bioclastic sand generation and ecosystem functioning. Mud content on reefs was also a strong predictor of reef recovery following major coral bleaching underscoring the need for holistic transboundary management of coral reefs as coastal urbanisation continues to intensify. National Research Foundation (NRF) Published version This work was funded by the National Research Foundation Singapore (NRF) under its NRF Fellowship scheme (Award NRF-NRFF14-2022-0004) to KM. This is Earth Observatory of Singapore contribution number 635. 2025-01-24T02:33:06Z 2025-01-24T02:33:06Z 2025 Journal Article Joppien, M. & Morgan, K. (2025). Benthic mud content is a strong indicator of coral cover and ecosystem recovery on turbid coral reefs. Marine Pollution Bulletin, 212, 117596-. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2025.117596 0025-326X https://hdl.handle.net/10356/182353 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2025.117596 212 117596 en NRF-NRFF14-2022-0004 Marine Pollution Bulletin 10.21979/N9/HNPL6N © 2025 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). application/pdf |
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Earth and Environmental Sciences Turbid reefs Sedimentation Bioclastic sediment Reef recovery Southeast Asia Ecosystem stability |
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Earth and Environmental Sciences Turbid reefs Sedimentation Bioclastic sediment Reef recovery Southeast Asia Ecosystem stability Joppien, Marlena Morgan, Kyle Benthic mud content is a strong indicator of coral cover and ecosystem recovery on turbid coral reefs |
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Turbid coral reefs are characterised by high turbidity and sedimentation. However, the impacts of terrestrial sediment inputs on coral communities, as well as their interactions with reef-derived carbonate sediment, remain poorly understood. Here we examine the physical properties of mixed carbonate-siliciclastic benthic sediments from six turbid reefs in southern Singapore, which exhibit coral covers ranging from 15 % to 65 %. Coral was the dominant contributor to sand and gravel sediment on reefs (mean ± SE: 57 ± 1 %), followed by molluscan grains (21 ± 1 %). Mud content ranged from 0 to 26 % between sites and there was a positive correlation (r = 0.4) between terrigenous mud and coral-derived sand, while coral cover significantly decreased with increasing mud. Results suggest that losses in coral cover may initially cause an increase in bioclastic carbonate sediment as the reef structure degrades. However, long-term declines in coral cover will ultimately reduce sediment supply, as live coral sources diminish on reefs. Our findings highlight the importance of mitigating high sediment loads on coral reefs, even within naturally turbid environments, to ensure continued bioclastic sand generation and ecosystem functioning. Mud content on reefs was also a strong predictor of reef recovery following major coral bleaching underscoring the need for holistic transboundary management of coral reefs as coastal urbanisation continues to intensify. |
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Asian School of the Environment |
author_facet |
Asian School of the Environment Joppien, Marlena Morgan, Kyle |
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Article |
author |
Joppien, Marlena Morgan, Kyle |
author_sort |
Joppien, Marlena |
title |
Benthic mud content is a strong indicator of coral cover and ecosystem recovery on turbid coral reefs |
title_short |
Benthic mud content is a strong indicator of coral cover and ecosystem recovery on turbid coral reefs |
title_full |
Benthic mud content is a strong indicator of coral cover and ecosystem recovery on turbid coral reefs |
title_fullStr |
Benthic mud content is a strong indicator of coral cover and ecosystem recovery on turbid coral reefs |
title_full_unstemmed |
Benthic mud content is a strong indicator of coral cover and ecosystem recovery on turbid coral reefs |
title_sort |
benthic mud content is a strong indicator of coral cover and ecosystem recovery on turbid coral reefs |
publishDate |
2025 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/182353 |
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1823108703790825472 |