Published 2016
| Version v1
Publication
Habitat constraints and self-thinning shape Mediterranean red coral deep population structure: Implications for conservation practice
Description
The Mediterranean red coral, Corallium rubrum, is one of the most precious corals worldwide. Below
50 m depth, C. rubrum populations are generally characterised by large and sparse colonies, whereas
shallow populations (above 50 m depth) show high densities of small colonies. We show here instead
that populations dwelling between 80 and 170 m depth exhibited a continuous range of population
density (from 2 to 75 colonies per 0.25 m2), with less than 1% of variance explained by water depth.
An inverse relationship between maximum population density and mean colony height was found,
suggesting that self-thinning processes may shape population structure. Moreover, demographically
young populations composed of small and dense colonies dominated along rocky vertical walls,
whereas mature populations characterised by large and sparsely distributed colonies were found only
in horizontal beds not covered by sediment. We hypothesise that, in the long term, shallow protected
populations should resemble to present deep populations, with sparsely distributed large colonies.
Since the density of red coral colonies can decay as a result of self-thinning mechanisms, we advise that
future protection strategies should be based also on a measure of red coral spatial coverage instead of
population density.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/874674
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/874674
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE