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Many habitat-building corals undergo mass synchronous spawning events. Yet, despite the enormous amounts of larvae produced, larval dispersal from a single spawning event and the reliability of larval supply are highly dependent on vagaries of ocean currents. However, colonies from the same population will occasionally spawn over successive months. These split spawning events likely help to realign reproduction events to favourable environmental conditions. Here, we show that split spawning may benefit corals by increasing the reliability of larval supply. By modelling the dispersal of coral larvae across Australia's Great Barrier Reef, we find that split spawning increased the diversity of sources and reliability of larval supply the reefs could receive, especially in regions with low and intrinsically variable connectivity. Such increased larval supply might help counteract the expected declines in reproductive success associated with split spawning events.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-11367-7 | DOI Listing |
Ecology
July 2025
Department of Biological Sciences, University of New Hampshire, Durham, New Hampshire, USA.
Energy is the currency of exchange within ecosystems which defines the strength and influence of interactions, particularly between predator and prey. The ability to estimate the productivity of an ecosystem is, therefore, dependent upon the estimation of consumer diet contents and their energetic quality. To estimate growth, reproduction, and, ultimately, survival of individuals, measures of prey quality for predators are essential both at the individual level and for scaling to ecosystem-wide fluxes and pools.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Evol
July 2025
Marine Spatial Ecology Lab School of the Environment, The University of Queensland St. Lucia Queensland Australia.
Understanding strategies of organisms that utilise multiple modes of reproduction presents a complex challenge for evolutionary biologists. The genus , a common reef-building coral with unclear reproductive boundaries among morphological species, illustrates these complexities. Here, we evaluate the contribution of different reproductive modes in the coral at Heron Island, on the southern Great Barrier Reef, during the less prominent phase of a split-spawning event, enabling assessment of reproductive outcomes associated with low population densities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Fish Biol
October 2024
School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York, USA.
Winter flounder Pseudopleuronectes americanus (Walbaum 1792) are a coastal flatfish species of economic and cultural importance that have dwindled to <15, % of their historic abundance in the southern New England/Mid-Atlantic region of the United States, with evidence indicating near-extirpation of certain local populations. This species exhibits intricate behaviors in spawning and migration that contribute to population complexity and resilience. These behaviors encompass full or partial philopatry to natal estuaries, the generation of multiple pulses of larval delivery, and partial migration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGlob Chang Biol
January 2024
Department of Evolution & Ecology, UC Davis, Davis, California, USA.
Understanding the mechanisms by which individual organisms respond and populations adapt to global climate change is a critical challenge. The role of plasticity and acclimation, within and across generations, may be essential given the pace of change. We investigated plasticity across generations and life stages in response to ocean acidification (OA), which poses a growing threat to both wild populations and the sustainable aquaculture of shellfish.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPeerJ
November 2023
Reefscapers PVT Ltd, Male, Maldives.
Understanding patterns in coral reproductive biology at local and regional scales is crucial to elucidate our knowledge of characteristics that regulate populations and communities. The lack of published data on coral spawning patterns in the Maldives hinders our understanding of coral reproductive biology and limits our ability to assess shifts in reproductive phenology over time. Here we document baseline environmental cues, spawning patterns, exact timings and oocyte development of restored and wild inhabiting shallow water reefs, across two Maldivian atolls.
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