Recognition of ecosystem functional optima allows early detection of
eutrophication in coral reef lagoons using seagrass meadows as
bioindicators
Abstract
An analysis for the impact on seagrass ecosystems of the eutrophic
conditions recently reported for the Mexican Caribbean revealed large
structural, floristic and community transformations over the last 20
years, but no adverse effects rather photosynthesis stimulation and
increases in biomass, leaf area and species diversity. This contrasts
with the declining global seagrass trend and the severe deterioration
widely documented for adjacent coral reefs. Six meadow’ types and three
community phase shifts were identified from oligotrophic conditions
until a functional optimum was achieved and slightly surpassed in the
northern region. Differences in the minimum light requirements and
species’ plasticity for expanding the size of the photosynthetic light
collector, explained germane interactions among species and early
community transformations in response to habitat fertilisation.
Understanding when ecosystem functional optima occur and community
transformations beyond that optimality initiate will enable early
detection of habitat deterioration (here, eutrophication) and
appropriate and timely conservation actions.