SummaryMany coral reefs worldwide have undergone phase shifts to alternate, degraded assemblages because of the combined effects of overfishing, declining water quality, and the direct and indirect impacts of climate change [1–9]. Here, we experimentally manipulated the density of large herbivorous fishes to test their influence on the resilience of coral assemblages in the aftermath of regional-scale bleaching in 1998, the largest coral mortality event recorded to date. The experiment was undertaken on the Great Barrier Reef, within a no-fishing reserve where coral abundances and diversity had been sharply reduced by bleaching [10]. In control areas, where fishes were abundant, algal abundance remained low, whereas coral cover almost doubl...
Understanding how and why coral reefs have changed over the last twenty to thirty years is crucial f...
Climate-induced coral bleaching is among the greatest current threats to coral reefs, causing widesp...
The dynamic nature of coral reefs offers a rare opportunity to examine the response of ecosystems to...
Many coral reefs worldwide have undergone phase shifts to alternate, degraded assemblages because of...
SummaryMany coral reefs worldwide have undergone phase shifts to alternate, degraded assemblages bec...
Please cite this article in press as: Hughes et al., Phase Shifts, Herbivory, and the Resilience of ...
A single ecosystem can exhibit great biogeographic and environmental variability. While a given ecol...
The 1998 global coral bleaching event was the largest recorded historical disturbance of coral reefs...
Cousin Island marine reserve (Seychelles) has been an effectively protected no-take marine protecte...
Abstract Changes from coral to macroalgal dominance following disturbances to corals symbolize the g...
Global warming is markedly changing diverse coral reef ecosystems through an increasing frequency an...
Coral reef fisheries support tens of millions of people, mostly in developing countries. Fishing on ...
ri land diversity had been sharply reduced by bleaching [10]. In control areas, where fishes were ab...
Understanding how and why coral reefs have changed over the last twenty to thirty years is crucial f...
Climate-induced coral bleaching is among the greatest current threats to coral reefs, causing widesp...
The dynamic nature of coral reefs offers a rare opportunity to examine the response of ecosystems to...
Many coral reefs worldwide have undergone phase shifts to alternate, degraded assemblages because of...
SummaryMany coral reefs worldwide have undergone phase shifts to alternate, degraded assemblages bec...
Please cite this article in press as: Hughes et al., Phase Shifts, Herbivory, and the Resilience of ...
A single ecosystem can exhibit great biogeographic and environmental variability. While a given ecol...
The 1998 global coral bleaching event was the largest recorded historical disturbance of coral reefs...
Cousin Island marine reserve (Seychelles) has been an effectively protected no-take marine protecte...
Abstract Changes from coral to macroalgal dominance following disturbances to corals symbolize the g...
Global warming is markedly changing diverse coral reef ecosystems through an increasing frequency an...
Coral reef fisheries support tens of millions of people, mostly in developing countries. Fishing on ...
ri land diversity had been sharply reduced by bleaching [10]. In control areas, where fishes were ab...
Understanding how and why coral reefs have changed over the last twenty to thirty years is crucial f...
Climate-induced coral bleaching is among the greatest current threats to coral reefs, causing widesp...
The dynamic nature of coral reefs offers a rare opportunity to examine the response of ecosystems to...