Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
Abstract
Extrinsic and intrinsic factors, physical and biological factors, and the interactions of all these are hypothesised to affect the diversity of coral reef-associated faunas. Extrinsic factors include environmental change at large spatial (regional) and temporal (geological) scales, and small (local or landscape) scale variation over ecologically relevant time. The latter also impinge on aspects intrinsic to the organisms, e.g. ecological specialisation, key innovations and life-history attributes, especially larval biology of sedentary benthic invertebrates. Certain species-rich genera and families of invertebrates and fishes contribute importantly to high species diversity of Indo-Pacific coral reefs. Naturally occurring gradients in diversity, ecology and life-history within these taxa can serve as dependent variables to test hypotheses of diversification. Gradient analyses of the most diverse genus of Indo-Pacific reef invertebrates, the gastropod Conus, support the ecological determinism and life-history hypotheses of diversity. The data do not refute other hypothesised mechanisms, which probably also operate. Broader application of gradient analysis to diverse taxa in the future may sharpen understanding of processes leading to modern patterns of diversity.
Introduction
Although geographically restricted to tropical seas and occupying only 0.1% of the earth's surface, coral reefs have globally important implications for marine biodiversity. Reefs support unusually diverse animal communities with distinctive taxonomic structure and geographical distribution patterns. Coral reefs are oases of high primary productivity in barren tropical seas, and reef-building organisms have changed the face of the earth by creating entire archipelagoes of islands and, over geological time, landforms that have become incorporated in continents.
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