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Active and passive pathways of nutrient transfer in coral reef ecosystems

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Active and passive pathways of nutrient transfer in coral reef ecosystems. / Dunn, R.E.; Graham, N.A.J.; Jeannot, L.-L. et al.
In: Coral Reefs, 30.05.2025.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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APA

Dunn, R. E., Graham, N. A. J., Jeannot, L.-L., Karkarey, R., Gonzalez-Barrios, F. J., Lange, I. D., Fillol, J. R., Roche, R., Stuhr, M., & Benkwitt, C. E. (2025). Active and passive pathways of nutrient transfer in coral reef ecosystems. Coral Reefs. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00338-025-02676-z

Vancouver

Dunn RE, Graham NAJ, Jeannot LL, Karkarey R, Gonzalez-Barrios FJ, Lange ID et al. Active and passive pathways of nutrient transfer in coral reef ecosystems. Coral Reefs. 2025 May 30. Epub 2025 May 30. doi: 10.1007/s00338-025-02676-z

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Bibtex

@article{12b91f3f064548459f9a76ac74abb849,
title = "Active and passive pathways of nutrient transfer in coral reef ecosystems",
abstract = "Coral reefs receive both passive and active nutrient subsidies, supplied via oceanographic processes and animal-mediated transfer, which can bolster reef productivity and resilience to disturbance. We examined the relative importance of these two pathways across lagoonal and seaward reefs, reefs of different depths, and those around islands either with or without breeding seabird colonies using carbon and nitrogen stable isotopes ({\dh}13C and {\dh}15N) and nutrient metrics (per cent N, %N and carbon-to-nitrogen ratios, C:N). We found increased passive oceanic nutrient inputs in reefs that were both deep and seaward facing, indicated by lower {\dh}13C values. Enriched {\dh}15N values and lower carbon-to-nitrogen ratios within reefs adjacent to islands with seabird colonies provided evidence of the role of seabirds as active vectors of nutrients to coral reef food webs, particularly within shallow, lagoonal reefs. Though %N values did not seem to provide a good indicator through which to disentangle active vs passive nutrient transport within this context, variation in {\dh}13C and {\dh}15N values and C:N ratios highlighted the interplay between passive oceanic processes and active seabird contributions to coral reefs. We emphasise the importance of both preserving and restoring natural nutrient pathways, particularly at a time when coral reef ecosystems are under increasing pressure from anthropogenic threats.",
author = "R.E. Dunn and N.A.J. Graham and L.-L. Jeannot and R. Karkarey and F.J. Gonzalez-Barrios and I.D. Lange and J.R. Fillol and R. Roche and M. Stuhr and C.E. Benkwitt",
note = "Export Date: 12 June 2025; Cited By: 0",
year = "2025",
month = may,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1007/s00338-025-02676-z",
language = "English",
journal = "Coral Reefs",
issn = "0722-4028",
publisher = "Springer-Verlag",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Active and passive pathways of nutrient transfer in coral reef ecosystems

AU - Dunn, R.E.

AU - Graham, N.A.J.

AU - Jeannot, L.-L.

AU - Karkarey, R.

AU - Gonzalez-Barrios, F.J.

AU - Lange, I.D.

AU - Fillol, J.R.

AU - Roche, R.

AU - Stuhr, M.

AU - Benkwitt, C.E.

N1 - Export Date: 12 June 2025; Cited By: 0

PY - 2025/5/30

Y1 - 2025/5/30

N2 - Coral reefs receive both passive and active nutrient subsidies, supplied via oceanographic processes and animal-mediated transfer, which can bolster reef productivity and resilience to disturbance. We examined the relative importance of these two pathways across lagoonal and seaward reefs, reefs of different depths, and those around islands either with or without breeding seabird colonies using carbon and nitrogen stable isotopes (ð13C and ð15N) and nutrient metrics (per cent N, %N and carbon-to-nitrogen ratios, C:N). We found increased passive oceanic nutrient inputs in reefs that were both deep and seaward facing, indicated by lower ð13C values. Enriched ð15N values and lower carbon-to-nitrogen ratios within reefs adjacent to islands with seabird colonies provided evidence of the role of seabirds as active vectors of nutrients to coral reef food webs, particularly within shallow, lagoonal reefs. Though %N values did not seem to provide a good indicator through which to disentangle active vs passive nutrient transport within this context, variation in ð13C and ð15N values and C:N ratios highlighted the interplay between passive oceanic processes and active seabird contributions to coral reefs. We emphasise the importance of both preserving and restoring natural nutrient pathways, particularly at a time when coral reef ecosystems are under increasing pressure from anthropogenic threats.

AB - Coral reefs receive both passive and active nutrient subsidies, supplied via oceanographic processes and animal-mediated transfer, which can bolster reef productivity and resilience to disturbance. We examined the relative importance of these two pathways across lagoonal and seaward reefs, reefs of different depths, and those around islands either with or without breeding seabird colonies using carbon and nitrogen stable isotopes (ð13C and ð15N) and nutrient metrics (per cent N, %N and carbon-to-nitrogen ratios, C:N). We found increased passive oceanic nutrient inputs in reefs that were both deep and seaward facing, indicated by lower ð13C values. Enriched ð15N values and lower carbon-to-nitrogen ratios within reefs adjacent to islands with seabird colonies provided evidence of the role of seabirds as active vectors of nutrients to coral reef food webs, particularly within shallow, lagoonal reefs. Though %N values did not seem to provide a good indicator through which to disentangle active vs passive nutrient transport within this context, variation in ð13C and ð15N values and C:N ratios highlighted the interplay between passive oceanic processes and active seabird contributions to coral reefs. We emphasise the importance of both preserving and restoring natural nutrient pathways, particularly at a time when coral reef ecosystems are under increasing pressure from anthropogenic threats.

U2 - 10.1007/s00338-025-02676-z

DO - 10.1007/s00338-025-02676-z

M3 - Journal article

JO - Coral Reefs

JF - Coral Reefs

SN - 0722-4028

ER -