Behavioural shifts of Diadema savignyi and their impact on coral communities around Rapa Nui
Summary
A complex system of feedbacks between species and their surroundings often generates ecosystems
at relatively stable states. Perturbations in such a system can lead to regime shifts especially in cases
of bistability. Here the behavioural shifts of the sea urchin Diadema savignyi were first determined
empirically at Rapa Nui. After which scenarios were created in a cellular automaton model to test
whether these shifts were important to consider in the ecosystem, namely by testing the impact of
herbivory pressure on the total covers of corals and algae. In bare dominated microhabitats, a doubled
foraging rate as well as spatial aggregation were observed for urchins. These behaviour switches did
not lead to evident changes in the model. However a scenario in which urchins also forage on coral
recruits did show a decrease in coral cover as urchin density increased. Empirically around the island
it was proposed increased pressures from human activities or wave exposure reduced the recruitment
rates of corals to such an extent that urchin grazing may have led to barren seascapes at certain sites.