Coral reefs persist in an accretion-erosion balance, which is critical for understanding the natural variability of sediment production, reef accretion, and their effects on the carbonate budget. Bioerosion (i.e. biodegradation of substrate) and encrustation (i.e. calcified overgrowth on substrate) influence the carbonate budget and the ecological functions of coral reefs, by substrate formation/consolidation/erosion, food availability and nutrient cycling. This study investigates settlement succession and carbonate budget change by bioeroding and encrusting calcifying organisms on experimentally deployed coral substrates (skeletal fragments of Stylophora pistillata branches). The substrates were deployed in a marginal coral reef located in...
Biological mediation of carbonate dissolution represents a fundamental component of the destructive ...
Zooxanthellate organisms, which are among the major carbonate producers on coral reefs, are highly a...
Bioerosion, the weakening and erosion of hard substrates by boring, etching, and grazing organisms, ...
Coral reefs persist in an accretion-erosion balance, which is critical for understanding the natural...
Coral reefs persist in an accretion-erosion balance, which is critical for understanding the natural...
Coral reefs persist in an accretion-erosion balance, which is critical for understanding the natural...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Public Library of Science via the DOI in th...
Coral recruitment and calcium carbonate (CaCO₃) accretion are fundamental processes that help mainta...
Coral cover has declined rapidly on Caribbean reefs since the early 1980s, reducing carbonate produc...
Coral cover has declined rapidly on Caribbean reefs since the early 1980s, reducing carbonate produc...
Coral cover has declined rapidly on Caribbean reefs since the early 1980s, reducing carbonate produc...
Coral cover has declined rapidly on Caribbean reefs since the early 1980s, reducing carbonate produc...
Zooxanthellate organisms, which are among the major carbonate producers on coral reefs, are highly a...
Zooxanthellate organisms, which are among the major carbonate producers on coral reefs, are highly a...
For coral reefs to persist, the rate of CaCO3 production must be greater than the rate of erosion to...
Biological mediation of carbonate dissolution represents a fundamental component of the destructive ...
Zooxanthellate organisms, which are among the major carbonate producers on coral reefs, are highly a...
Bioerosion, the weakening and erosion of hard substrates by boring, etching, and grazing organisms, ...
Coral reefs persist in an accretion-erosion balance, which is critical for understanding the natural...
Coral reefs persist in an accretion-erosion balance, which is critical for understanding the natural...
Coral reefs persist in an accretion-erosion balance, which is critical for understanding the natural...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Public Library of Science via the DOI in th...
Coral recruitment and calcium carbonate (CaCO₃) accretion are fundamental processes that help mainta...
Coral cover has declined rapidly on Caribbean reefs since the early 1980s, reducing carbonate produc...
Coral cover has declined rapidly on Caribbean reefs since the early 1980s, reducing carbonate produc...
Coral cover has declined rapidly on Caribbean reefs since the early 1980s, reducing carbonate produc...
Coral cover has declined rapidly on Caribbean reefs since the early 1980s, reducing carbonate produc...
Zooxanthellate organisms, which are among the major carbonate producers on coral reefs, are highly a...
Zooxanthellate organisms, which are among the major carbonate producers on coral reefs, are highly a...
For coral reefs to persist, the rate of CaCO3 production must be greater than the rate of erosion to...
Biological mediation of carbonate dissolution represents a fundamental component of the destructive ...
Zooxanthellate organisms, which are among the major carbonate producers on coral reefs, are highly a...
Bioerosion, the weakening and erosion of hard substrates by boring, etching, and grazing organisms, ...