Effects of Coral Disease on Exosymbiotic Invertebrate Assemblage Examining exo-symbiont assemblage on healthy and diseased Porites species throughout shallow water reef systems on Hawaiʻi Island

dc.contributor.advisor Takabayashi, Misaki
dc.contributor.author Pihana, Hokuokahalelani
dc.contributor.department Tropical Conservation Biology & Environmental Science
dc.date.accessioned 2018-02-23T19:59:24Z
dc.date.available 2018-02-23T19:59:24Z
dc.date.issued 2017-12
dc.description.abstract Pōhaku puna (Porites lobata Dana, 1846) is a foundational coral species found throughout coral reef systems in Hawaiʻi, that is of cultural and ecological importance. Local and global anthropogenic impacts to coastal environment make pōhaku puna (Porites lobata) and other coral species vulnerable to diseases and other afflictions. Growth anomaly (GA) is a disease that has been identified on other coral species as abnormal tissue growth that increases mortality and hinders biological functions such as growth, digestion, defense, and feeding which results in reduced fecundity. This study developed a morphological definition of the GA disease found on pōhaku puna colonies, in comparison to unafflicted (UA) and healthy (H) coral tissue, based on the difference in mean polyp density (H=4.1 polyp/cm2, UA = 3.2 polyp/cm2, GA=2.9 polyp/cm2), mean individual polyp diameter (H=1.2mm, UA=1.6mm, GA=1.8mm), and mean distance between coral polyps (H=2.0mm, UA=1.6mm, GA=2.7mm). Of these parameters, the distance between coral polyps was the only parameter that showed significant difference between GA, UA, and H coral tissue. Additionally, 12 pōhaku puna colonies were examined over six months to determine any differences in exosymbiont species assemblage between GA afflicted and unafflicted pōhaku puna colonies. No significant differences were found in exosymbiont species diversity (p-value > 0.05) and density (p-value > 0.05) between GA afflicted and unafflicted pōhaku puna colonies suggesting that the presence of GA afflictions on pōhaku puna does not impact exosymbiont assemblage. These results imply that there is little impact to exosymbiotic community assemblage from this disease, and the relationships amongst these host corals and their exosymbiont invertebrates are resilient to this disease. The size of the individual colonies and the proportion of the coral surface area occupied by GA could be a factor also and can be further investigated in future studies. It is important to note that this disease could potentially impact whole reef ecosystem structure by negatively effecting coral physiological processes and biological functions. To further elucidate the effects of coral GAs to whole ecosystem health and productivity future studies need to be more longitudinal and must examine the impacts to the physiological and ecological processes at the ecosystem level.
dc.description.degree M.S.
dc.description.institution University of Hawaii at Hilo
dc.format.extent 46 pages
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10790/3419
dc.language.iso en
dc.subject Ecology
dc.subject Cultural resources management
dc.subject Environmental science
dc.subject coral disease
dc.subject exosymbiont
dc.subject growth anomalies
dc.subject pohaku puna
dc.title Effects of Coral Disease on Exosymbiotic Invertebrate Assemblage Examining exo-symbiont assemblage on healthy and diseased Porites species throughout shallow water reef systems on Hawaiʻi Island
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local.identifier.alturi http://dissertations.umi.com/hilo.hawaii:10153
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