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Interesting Images

The Millepora Zone Is Back: Recent Findings from the Northernmost Region of the Maldives

1
Seascape Ecology Laboratory, Department of Earth, Environment and Life Sciences (DiSTAV), University of Genoa, Corso Europa 26, 16132 Genova, Italy
2
Save the Beach Maldives, Boakeyo Goalhi, Villimalé 21022, Maldives
3
Department of Biosciences, Biotechnologies and Environment, University of Bari Aldo Moro, Via Orabona 4, 70125 Bari, Italy
4
National Biodiversity Future Center (NBFC), Piazza Marina, 61, 90133 Palermo, Italy
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Diversity 2024, 16(4), 204; https://doi.org/10.3390/d16040204
Submission received: 7 March 2024 / Revised: 26 March 2024 / Accepted: 26 March 2024 / Published: 28 March 2024
(This article belongs to the Collection Interesting Images from the Sea)

Abstract

:
Three species of the tropical hydrocoral genus Millepora were common and abundant in the Maldives before 1998, characterizing extensive shallow reef areas known as ‘Millepora zones’. The 1998 heat wave resulted in mass mortality of all the Millepora species, the characteristic Millepora zones disappeared, and only a few observations of isolated colonies were reported in the years ahead. A recent expedition (January 2024) to the northernmost region of the Maldives (Ihavandhippolhu Atoll) revealed new Millepora zones at 7–13 m depth, suggesting a potential repopulation of a vulnerable genus considered regionally extinct.

Global ocean warming is exerting a significant impact on marine life, leading to marine ecosystems’ alterations, such as rising temperatures, ocean acidification, and environmental degradation. These changes influence the species’ behaviour, abundance, and distribution [1,2,3]. According to thermal niches and other biological traits [4], species may undergo phenological and distributional shifts or may change their abundance [1,5], and rare species may either face extinction or become more common [6]. Comparing historical and current records of marine benthic species distribution is crucial for detecting variations in biodiversity and understanding the causes of change [7,8].
Hydrozoans in the genus Millepora Linnaeus, 1758 (family Milleporidae, class Hydrozoa, phylum Cnidaria) are colonial, polypoid hydrocorals secreting a calcareous skeleton of an encrusting or upright form [9]. The numerous and highly toxic defensive polyps extending from the skeleton give their popular common names of stinging corals or fire corals [10]. All Millepora species are long-lived, zooxanthellate and hermatypic hydrocorals [11] and are considered a regular component of tropical coral reefs, from the surface up to a 40 m depth [12]. The genus Millepora is present in the Maldives with three species, Millepora platyphylla (Hemprich & Ehrenberg 1834), M. tenera (Boschma 1949) and M. latifolia (Boschma 1948) [9,13]. Millepora platyphylla is the most widely distributed in the Indo-Pacific, predominantly found on the surf-swept edges of reefs, shoals, and ledges with strong, turbulent water movement, and displaying a robust, bladed, or plate-like structure [12]. In contrast, the other two species—and especially M. latifolia—are characterized by delicate branches and thin, leafy forms, and exhibit a more confined distribution in the Indo-West Pacific, where they typically live in lagoons and sheltered waters [12]. Historical records from the early 20th century described Millepora species as abundant and frequent in the Maldives [14,15]. During the 1990s, Millepora spp. were often reported as characterizing extensive areas of the reef in very shallow waters (~3 m depth), called ‘Millepora zones’ [16,17]. While the literature lacks a precise definition of the Millepora zone, this can be identified as a reef portion dominated predominantly by hydrocorals in the genus Millepora, whose abundance in terms of surface covered or colonies density is high enough to characterize the reef. Prolonged thermal anomalies have already been shown to cause the expulsion of symbiotic dinoflagellates, compromising populations of hydrocorals during the past 30 years [18,19]. Around 32 °C, Millepora spp. exhibit a bleaching response to thermal stress that is similar to scleractinian corals [20]. In the Maldives, the severe heat wave of 1998 resulted in mass mortality of all the Millepora species [21], which almost disappeared in the whole archipelago [22]. Only single observations of a few sporadic colonies were reported in the years ahead in deeper waters (>7 m depth), always with less than 1% of the bottom coverage on the reef [13], thus providing evidence of the total disappearance of the characteristic Millepora zones. By 2013, Millepora spp. encounters were so infrequent that the genus was proposed as a case of local extirpation in the Maldives [23].
The Maldives Archipelago forms the central part of the Chagos-Maldives-Laccadive ridge in the central Indian Ocean, extending from 7°07′ N to 0°42′ S and from 72°33′ to 73°45′ E. Comprising approximately 1120 islands, the Maldives form a single atoll chain in both the northern and southern regions, with a double atoll chain in its central part. In January 2024, the “Up North expedition” was carried out in Ihavandhippolhu Atoll, the northernmost area of the Maldives (Figure 1). This remote atoll is located in a scantly anthropized region where tourism frequentation is lower than in all the other central and southern atolls [24]. The expedition aimed to explore and survey those reefs in the region that were described, for the first time, in 2011 [23]. Underwater visual surveys were carried out on ten reefs, from the reef flat up to a 30 m depth (Table 1), to collect data on the abundance (expressed as % cover) and the composition of the reef communities. Visual surveys also aimed at verifying the presence of the three Millepora species that had never been reported in the northern Maldives after 1998 [23]. In the presence of Millepora spp., the % cover was visually estimated using the plain view technique [25]. Divers hovered 1–2 m above the seafloor observing an area of about 20 m2 in three replicates (spaced tens of meters apart) at each of the ten reef sites investigated.
Millepora spp. were found at Huvahandhoo Beyru, at a 7–10 m depth, and at Vaagaru Beyru, at a 10–13 m depth (Table 1). In both sites, the hydrocoral dominated a specific portion of the reef between 7 to 13 m depth, where it showed high densities and locally covered nearly 100% of the substrate, thus creating the characteristic Millepora zones. When averaging the % cover of the Millepora spp. across the ten reefs surveyed in Ihavandhippolhu Atoll, a mean cover value of 3.3 ± 2.3% was registered (Figure 2). A taxonomic identification of the specimens found was unlikely, given the difficult taxonomic resolution of the Millepora genus [26,27] and the uncertain identification based on images collected underwater. Considering the morphologic plasticity of the genus showcasing highly variable phenotypic forms across a broad spectrum of depths and environmental conditions [28], we tentatively identified Millepora cf. platyphylla on Huvahandhoo Beyru reef, based on its plate-like structure, and Millepora cf. tenera on Vaagaru Beyru reef, based on a more branched habitus (Figure 3).
The high susceptibility of Millepora spp. to water warming and thermal anomalies is widely reported (e.g., [11] and references therein). Re-discovering dense reef zones with Millepora spp. in the northernmost region of the Maldives is particularly noteworthy, as it marks a unique finding after the 1998 heatwave. Before our findings, the most recent record of Millepora in the northern region of the Maldives dates to 2009, when a single colony of M. platyphyllia, at approximately 7 m depth, was observed [13]. The regeneration of a characteristic Millepora zone likely involved a period of adaptation, between 1998 and 2024. Also, it likely required a shift in the depth range preferred by the species, from the very shallow waters of the reef flat (around 3 m depth)—typical of the historical occurrences of the Millepora zones in the Maldives—to deeper waters at around 7–13 m depth. These findings recall the still-debated Deep Reef Refugia Hypothesis [33,34,35]. The concept of providing an ‘escape from disturbances’ was initially introduced by Glynn (1996) [36], suggesting that coral communities at a ‘moderate depth’ may find protection from rapid ocean warming. Moving to major depths could be crucial for the local persistence of heat-sensitive marine organisms in the face of climate change conditions [24,37,38,39]. The Millepora zones persist within the euphotic zone; however, there is a slight yet significant depth variation due to evident environmental distinctions between the reef flat areas (approximately 3 m depth) and the reef edge and slope (approximately 7–13 m depth) in shallow Maldivian reefs [11,22].
The two Millepora zones were observed in exposed ocean reefs, which contrasts with the previous sightings of Millepora spp. colonies and Millepora zones that had always been mainly found in sheltered (lagoon) reefs (e.g., [16]). During the last severe bleaching event of 2016, exposed ocean reefs experienced fewer impacts than lagoon reefs, resulting in lower coral mortality [24,31]. The intense monsoonal ocean currents, driving movements of upwelling currents and bringing cooler water, were recognized as one of the main reasons for the higher resistance of corals in ocean reefs [40]. The return of the Millepora zones in Hiavandhippolhu Atoll sparks hope for a potential repopulation of a vulnerable genus that was considered regionally extinct. Moreover, the branching structures formed in the wide Millepora zones enhance substrate complexity, thereby promoting the development of diverse and abundant fish and macro-invertebrate communities. The return of this formation in a remote region of the Maldives suggests that the combined effect of local human disturbances and climate change in the more developed central and southern atolls might prevent, or at least slow down, the recovery of the most vulnerable species to thermal stress [6,41]. Periodic surveys carried out in the central and the southern atolls of the Maldives during the last 26 years did not report any single colony of the Millepora spp. [22,24,31]. Regular monitoring and genetic analysis will be essential for identifying Millepora species in the northernmost Maldivian region, understanding local populations, and assessing their potential recovery across the entire archipelago.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization I.P., H.A., M.M. and G.C.; methodology I.P., H.A., M.M. and G.C.; validation I.P., H.A., M.M. and G.C.; formal analysis I.P. and M.M.; investigation I.P., H.A., M.M. and G.C.; data curation I.P., M.M. and G.C.; writing—original draft preparation I.P., M.M. and G.C.; writing—review and editing I.P., M.M. and G.C.; supervision M.M.; project administration M.M.; funding acquisition M.M. and G.C. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research was partially funded by the National Recovery and Resilience Plan (NRRP), Mission 4 Component 2 Investment 1.4-Call for tender No. 3138 of 16 December 2021, rectified by Decree No. 3175 of 18 December 2021 of the Italian Ministry of University and Research funded by the European Union—NextGenerationEU; Project code CN_00000033, Spoke 1, Concession Decree No. 1034 of 17 June 2022 adopted by the Italian Ministry of University and Research, Project title “National Biodiversity Future Center—NBFC”.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

The raw data supporting the conclusions of this article will be made available by the authors on request.

Acknowledgments

We express our gratitude to Mohamed Muzafar, Farish Mohamed, Marina Sierra Perez, and the entire team at the Hanimadoo diving centre for their invaluable support in facilitating our field activities and managing the logistical aspects of the expedition. Additionally, we extend our sincere thanks to the Ministry of Fisheries and Ocean Resources and the Ministry of Climate Change Environment and Energy for granting the necessary permits to conduct our research. Finally, the authors would like to thank Carlo Nike Bianchi and Carla Morri for their invaluable suggestions during the conception of the manuscript.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest. The funders had no role in the design of the study; in the collection, analyses, or interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript; or in the decision to publish the results.

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Figure 1. Map of the Maldives Archipelago with a zoom on Hiavandhippolhu Atoll. The red circles are the two sites where colonies of Millepora spp. have been found in January 2024.
Figure 1. Map of the Maldives Archipelago with a zoom on Hiavandhippolhu Atoll. The red circles are the two sites where colonies of Millepora spp. have been found in January 2024.
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Figure 2. Historical reconstruction of Millepora spp. sightings in the Maldives. Where only one colony was documented, a % cover of 0.5% was assigned. Note that the scale on the x-axis is not uniform. Data sources: 1957 [29]; 1993 [30]; 1997–2014 [22]; 2015–2023 [24,31,32]; 2024 (this study).
Figure 2. Historical reconstruction of Millepora spp. sightings in the Maldives. Where only one colony was documented, a % cover of 0.5% was assigned. Note that the scale on the x-axis is not uniform. Data sources: 1957 [29]; 1993 [30]; 1997–2014 [22]; 2015–2023 [24,31,32]; 2024 (this study).
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Figure 3. Plate-like structure of Millepora cf. platyphylla colonies found on Huvahandhoo Beyru reef (upper panels), and the more branched habitus typical of Millepora cf. tenera found on Vaagaru Beyru reef (lower panels).
Figure 3. Plate-like structure of Millepora cf. platyphylla colonies found on Huvahandhoo Beyru reef (upper panels), and the more branched habitus typical of Millepora cf. tenera found on Vaagaru Beyru reef (lower panels).
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Table 1. Geographic location of the ten reefs investigated during the “Up North Expedition” in the Ihavandhippolhu Atoll. The two reefs where the Millepora zones were found are in bold.
Table 1. Geographic location of the ten reefs investigated during the “Up North Expedition” in the Ihavandhippolhu Atoll. The two reefs where the Millepora zones were found are in bold.
Site NameCoordinates
Manafaru06°59.674′ N; 72°56.657′ E
Uligamu Ethere07°05.309′ N; 72°54.934′ E
Muladhoo Ethere07°01.650′ N; 72°59.005′ E
Medafushi07°00.605′ N; 72°55.844′ E
Huvahndhoo Ethere06°57.518′ N; 72°54.507′ E
Huvahandhoo Beyru06°57.080′ N; 72°53.976′ E
Galandhoo Beyru06°56.596′ N; 72°59.174′ E
Vagaaru Beyru07°05.980′ N; 72°52.410′ E
Uligamu Beyru07°04.816′ N; 72°56.136′ E
Gambas07°01.616′ N; 72°59.722′ E
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Pancrazi, I.; Ahmed, H.; Chimienti, G.; Montefalcone, M. The Millepora Zone Is Back: Recent Findings from the Northernmost Region of the Maldives. Diversity 2024, 16, 204. https://doi.org/10.3390/d16040204

AMA Style

Pancrazi I, Ahmed H, Chimienti G, Montefalcone M. The Millepora Zone Is Back: Recent Findings from the Northernmost Region of the Maldives. Diversity. 2024; 16(4):204. https://doi.org/10.3390/d16040204

Chicago/Turabian Style

Pancrazi, Irene, Hassan Ahmed, Giovanni Chimienti, and Monica Montefalcone. 2024. "The Millepora Zone Is Back: Recent Findings from the Northernmost Region of the Maldives" Diversity 16, no. 4: 204. https://doi.org/10.3390/d16040204

APA Style

Pancrazi, I., Ahmed, H., Chimienti, G., & Montefalcone, M. (2024). The Millepora Zone Is Back: Recent Findings from the Northernmost Region of the Maldives. Diversity, 16(4), 204. https://doi.org/10.3390/d16040204

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