The Effects of Nitrogen and Phosphorus Enrichment on Algal Community Development: Artificial Mini-reefs on the Belize Barrier Reef Sedimentary Lagoon
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Abstract
The experiments to compare DIN and SRP enrichment effects on algal community development were conducted within a lagoonal rubble/sand reef apron west of the back reef flat at Carrie Bow Cay, Belize. Macroalgae dominate (23 taxa, 57% cover), ambient dissolved inorganic nutrient concentrations are above the levels documented for release of macroalgal growth (means of 2.06 [mu]M DIN = dissolved inorganic nitrogen and 0.12 [mu]M SRP = soluble reactive phosphorus) and grazing is negligible (1.7% Acanthophora spicifera consumed 6 hr-1). Mini-reef diffusers containing slow-release fertilizers significantly (P < 0.05) increased DIN in the experimental DIN and SRP + DIN treatments by 2-fold and 3-fold (means of 4.64 and 6.41 [mu]M), respectively; while SRP was increased significantly (P < 0.05) in the SRP and SRP + DIN treatments by 5- and 8-fold to means of 0.69 and 0.94 [mu]M, relative to the control treatments. SRP and SRP + DIN treatments favored colonization by Cyanobacteria such as Spirulina sp. on the mini-reef/diffusers, with an opposite detrimental effect on reef-building crustose coralline algae. The Cyanobacteria bloom further inhibited the long-term settlement and colonization of crustose coralline algae. Conversely, the DIN and control mini-reef treatments showed low Cyanobacteria cover and became colonized by abundant reef-building coralline algae, consisting mostly of Hydrolithon boergesenii and crust stages of Amphiroa fragilissima. After one year, the competitively overgrowing macrophytes Acanthophora spicifera, Palisada papillosa, Padina sanctae-crucis and Spyridia filamentosa conspicuously dominated all of the treatment- and control-replicates, in accordance with the nutrient-replete ambient waters and negligible herbivory within this habitat. As predicted, nutrient additions to the mini-reef diffusers resulted in significant elevations of tissue nutrients in the most-abundant colonizer and habitat dominant, Acanthophora spicifera. Although, the resultant decreases of both the C:N and C:P molar ratios corresponded to the elevated DIN and SRP treatments, this uptake was entirely superfluous, since control population colonization and growth matched that of the experimental nutrient treatments.