The effect of catchment load reductions on water quality in the crown-of-thorn starfish outbreak initiation zone

Mar Pollut Bull. 2023 Oct:195:115255. doi: 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2023.115255. Epub 2023 Sep 7.

Abstract

Crown-of-Thorns Starfish (CoTS) population outbreaks contribute to coral cover decline on Indo-Pacific reefs. On the Great Barrier Reef (GBR), enhanced catchment nutrient loads are hypothesised to increase phytoplankton food for CoTS larvae in the outbreak initiation zone. This study examines whether catchment load reductions will improve water quality in this zone during the larval period. We defined the i) initiation zone's spatial extent; ii) larval stage's temporal extent; and iii) water quality thresholds related to larval food, from published information. We applied these to model simulations, developed to quantify the effect of catchment load reductions on GBR water quality (Baird et al., 2021), and found a consistently weak response of chlorophyll-a, total organic nitrogen and large zooplankton concentrations in the initiation zone. Model results indicate marine and atmospheric forcing are more likely to control the planktonic biomass in this zone, even during major flooding events purported to precede CoTS outbreaks.

Keywords: Chlorophyll-a; Great Barrier Reef Dynamic SedNet catchment model; Large zooplankton; Terrestrial run-off; Total organic nitrogen; eReefs coupled hydrodynamic - biogeochemical model.