Introduction

Tropical coral reefs are highly productive ecosystems, but as they are typically surrounded by oligotrophic waters, they require constant recycling and retention of waterborne nutrients and organic matter (Galloway et al. 2004). There are a wide range of physical and biological processes on coral reefs which can retain these essential energetic resources within local biogeochemical cycles for extended periods of time. Thus, these processes can sustain rapid rates of biological activity such as primary productivity, as well as many other key ecosystem functions (Wyatt et al. 2013). For instance, coral-derived particulate organic matter (POM) in the form of mucus can act as an energy carrier and particle trap, so these nutrients may be recycled by benthic and planktonic communities over longer timescales (Ferrier-Pagès et al. 1998; Wild et al. 2004a, b). However, even in a coral-dominated ecosystem, they are not the only natural, or autochthonous, source of bioavailable nutrients (Davey et al. 2008; Wyatt et al. 2013; Tanaka and Nakajima 2018). Microbes, for instance, are capable of nitrogen fixation (Moulton et al. 2016), and other primary producers, such as phytoplankton and macroalgae, readily take up and store nutrients and dissolved organic matter (DOM) in their tissues (Fong et al. 1994). This DOM is then recycled either through tissue breakdown or through consumption by higher trophic level organisms such as herbivorous fishes, which in turn recycle significant amounts of nutrients through excretion (Burkepile et al. 2013).

Healthy coral reefs typically persist in low nutrient waters, although nutrient pulses can disrupt the balance of natural biogeochemical dynamics jeopardising reef health. Disturbances such as marine heat waves that cause coral bleaching have a direct negative impact on corals, but can also have indirect consequences for reefs by altering nutrient dynamics (D’Angelo and Wiedenmann 2014). Branching scleractinian corals are often dominant on a reef, providing structural complexity and micro-habitats for a variety of reef-associated organisms, but they are also particularly vulnerable to heat stress (Hughes et al. 2019). The loss of these vital foundation species therefore has huge implications for the entire ecosystem (Graham et al. 2015; Wilson et al. 2019). Where coral bleaching causes extensive mortality, the metabolic exchange between corals and associated organisms on a reef is reduced, along with the capacity of corals to trap organic matter. This can subsequently trigger the dysfunction of major biogeochemical processes (Glynn 1993; Wild et al. 2011).

There are few studies assessing how climate-derived disturbances affect mucus release by live corals, and associated processes. Davey et al. (2008) found that in the weeks that follow coral bleaching, a 30-fold higher production of new nitrogen occurred on coral reefs compared to those that did not experience bleaching. Such nitrogen productivity has also been shown in an experimental setting (Niggl et al. 2009). While release rates of mucus-derived POM from corals increase during the early stages of bleaching, providing a burst of nutrients to coral reefs (Coffroth 1990), these rates can decrease after the initial bleaching response (Fitt et al. 2009; Wooldridge 2009). If corals recover from bleaching, which can take many weeks to occur (Gates 1990), there may only be short- to medium-term effects on biogeochemical processes. However, if corals die, the subsequent mass release of coral tissue into reef environments may also alter biogeochemical processes, and over longer time scales. In addition, colonisation of the exposed coral skeleton by microbial biofilms, turf algae, macroalgae, sponges, cyanobacteria or other invertebrates may not only reduce coral recruitment success, but can also change biogeochemical processes such as nitrogen fixation (Diaz-Pulido and McCook 2002; Davey et al. 2008; Haas et al. 2010).

In order to identify changes in nutrient regimes due to mass coral mortality, nitrogen stable isotopes (δ15N) and nitrogen content (%N) can be analysed from macroalgal tissues to capture temporally-extensive records of nutrient loads (Costanzo et al. 2001). Stable isotopes of nitrogen have been used in nutrient studies for several decades, helping to identify the origins of nitrogen (Heaton 1986; Kolasinski et al. 2011). In addition, certain types of marine algae are commonly used in biomonitoring studies due to their widespread distribution and responsiveness to bioavailable pollutants. Sargassum, for example, is a genus used worldwide as it has been found to be responsive to nutrient enrichment (Schaffelke and Klumpp 1998; Schaffelke 2002; García-Seoane et al. 2018). However, marine algae are not the only functional group that can be used to measure isotopic signatures as a proxy of nutrient regimes on reefs. Organisms at higher trophic levels also assimilate nutrients from lower trophic levels, resulting in increasing isotopic enrichment up the food chain (Bierwagen et al. 2018). For instance, corals are at a higher trophic level than primary producers such as macroalgae, and thus have enriched isotopic signatures (Graham et al. 2018). As corals release organic matter into the water column after the death and subsequent decay of tissue following marine heatwave-driven mortality events (Leggat et al. 2019), opportunistic benthic species such as macroalgae may capitalise on this new nutrient source, assimilate it into tissues for growth and storage, and consequently become more enriched (Pawlik et al. 2016).

In the current study, the temporal effect of coral mass mortality on macroalgal stable isotopic signatures is investigated in two different coral reef systems, over two different time periods. As such, it offers new understanding on whether macroalgae can indicate longer-term effects of coral mortality events on reef nutrient dynamics and biogeochemical cycles. Specifically this study assesses: (1) changes in Sargassum sp. nutrient signatures over three years in the inner Seychelles Islands, western Indian Ocean, spanning a mass coral bleaching event, and (2) shorter-term changes in Sargassum mangarevense nutrient signatures ~ 3 months after the peak of a severe bleaching event in Mo’orea, French Polynesia, using an in-situ three-week transplant experiment.

Methods

Study Site 1: Seychelles

The inner Seychelles islands experienced two severe coral bleaching events, in 1998 and 2016. In 1998, coral cover dropped by 90%, and though hard coral cover steadily recovered on some study sites (average coral cover of 27% by 2014) (Graham et al. 2015), another global bleaching event in 2016 (Hughes et al. 2018) led to live coral cover declining by 70% on these same sites (Wilson et al. 2019). Around the Inner Seychelles, heat stress reached 4 °C weeks in January 2016, rapidly increased in April and peaked at 11.4 °C weeks in May (Wilson et al. 2019; http://coralreefwatch.noaa.gov/vs/index.php).

Eighteen reefs were surveyed in April 2014, before the mass bleaching event caused extensive coral mortality in 2016 and again in April 2017, a year after the event occurred (Wilson et al. 2019). These reefs form part of a 25-year coral reef monitoring survey around the inner Seychelles, with roughly half the reefs having been defined as “recovering” from a previous mass bleaching event in 1998, and the other half as transitioning to a “regime-shifted” macroalgae-dominated state (Graham et al. 2015). Eight replicate 7-m radius point counts were surveyed along the reef slope on each reef for both survey years. Within each point count area, the percent cover of benthic categories including live hard coral, soft coral, macroalgae, sand, rubble and rock was quantified using 10-m-long line-intercept transects (Wilson et al. 2019).

The objectives of this component of the study were to assess the relationship between changes in percent cover of corals between the study years of 2014 and 2017 with differences in δ15N and %N signatures in tissues of Sargassum sp. that were collected from the same sites during the same surveys. Low availability of macroalgae at some reefs meant that macroalgae for stable isotope analyses were not collected from all reefs in both years. A minimum of four replicate Sargassum sp. samples were collected from each of the seven “coral mortality” reefs (a subset of the previously termed “recovery reefs”, named as such following the impacts of the 2016 bleaching event) and from the six “regime-shifted” reefs in both 2014 and 2017.

Study Site 2: Mo’orea

Mo’orea, an island which is part of the Society Archipelago in French Polynesia, has demonstrated rapid coral recovery from previous disturbances (Vercelloni et al. 2019; Hédouin et al. 2020). For example, following an outbreak of Acanthaster spp. from 2006 to 2009 and a cyclone in 2010, mean coral cover on the outer reefs was reduced to 2% at 10 m depth from a high of 39% in 2005, before recovering to 27% in just four years. The branching coral genus Pocillopora spp. was found to be a significant driver in that recovery, as it made up 53% of the re-established coral community (18% cover) (Tsounis and Edmunds 2016). There were no recorded episodes of abnormally high sea surface temperature (SST) in 1998 in Mo’orea, but it was impacted by the global coral bleaching event in 2016, with heat-sensitive branching corals being the worst affected (Hughes et al. 2019). Donovan et al. (2020) reported that 37% of Acropora and 28% of Pocillopora colonies exhibited bleaching across all sites, with up to 100% bleaching of Acropora on north shore sites. Coral mortality was rare (~ 1%), as heat stress did not exceed 1.1 °C weeks (Hédouin et al. 2020).

Annual surveys of 13 marine areas around Mo’orea were established in 2004 (Service National d’Observation CORAIL). For the purpose of this study, data for the reef slope at the four areas along the north coast of the island, where bleaching was highest and our study site was located, were used (Suppl Fig. 1). This includes the site Tiahura which is closest to our study site. The benthic cover of each sample area was quantified at a similar depth to the transplant site (~ 10 m) using 3 replicate non-permanent 25 m transects (Horta e Costa et al. 2016). The percentage cover of benthic components was sampled every 50 cm using the point intercept transect (PIT) method. Macroalgae were categorised as all the non-coralline algae of large enough size to identify with the naked eye.

Fig. 1
figure 1

Box and whisker plots of the median a total and branching coral cover in both pre-bleaching and post-bleaching years (2014 and 2017, respectively) on “coral mortality” reefs (n = 7), b the average δ15N signatures in Sargassum sp. tissues in both years, and c the average percent N (%N) in both years. The pale blue boxes represent the pre-bleaching year and pale pink boxes represent the post-bleaching year, both showing the third quartile (Q3) and first quartile (Q1) range of the data, the whiskers (95% quartile) and data outliers

Sea surface temperature (SST) was measured hourly using an SBE-56 sensor (Sea Bird Scientific) on the Tiahura forereef at 3 m depth from 1998 to 2005. The time series was interrupted for 5 years before being collected continuously again from 2010. In order to characterise the temperature trend in 2019, relative to that of other years, we calculated weekly means for 2019 and compared this with the average temperature time series and 95% confidence intervals for the entire period. In addition, following Donovan et al. (2020), we calculated cumulative heat stress (in °C weeks) as a 12-wk running sum for all temperatures exceeding 29 °C, a threshold that is considered a good predictor of bleaching in Mo’orea based on previous studies (Pratchett et al. 2013; Donovan et al. 2020; Hédouin et al. 2020). The maximum water temperature during 2019 exceeded 29 °C in March and peaked at ~ 30 °C in April. Patterns of cumulative heat stress peaked at ∼6 °C weeks. As the duration of heat stress was much longer in 2019 than in the previous bleaching event (Donovan et al. 2020; Hédouin et al. 2020), the extent of coral mortality was much higher (Suppl Fig.  2).

Fig. 2
figure 2

Change in absolute total coral cover and the corresponding changes in δ15N in Sargassum tissues across seven coral mortality reefs in the Seychelles between 2014 and 2017. The regression lines and confidence intervals were obtained using linear regression coefficient of determination (r2); 95% confidence intervals

Samples of Sargassum mangarevense (n = 10) were collected from Papetoai lagoon, a low-nutrient reef in the northwest region of Mo’orea on 6th July 2019 (Suppl Fig. 1). These waters were found to typically have low δ15N and %N values, shown in nutrient heat maps in Leichter et al. (2013) and Donovan et al. (2020). Specimens were placed in shaded coolers filled with seawater before they were transported back to the CRIOBE research station, Mo’orea. After all visible, larger epiphytes were carefully removed from the fronds using a scalpel; initial tissue samples were taken and frozen at −20 °C for later stable isotopic analyses. Algal specimens were then placed in pre-transplant holding tanks for seven days, with water changes every 2 days. Water changes in the tanks involved surface water collected from the forereef, as it was found to typically be low in δ15N (< 3.0 ‰, Lin and Fong 2008; Donovan et al. 2020). This was done to ensure that internal nutrient stores in S. mangarevense were depleted before specimens were transplanted on the forereef where there were high levels of coral mortality. Following this 7-day acclimation period, further tissue samples were taken for stable isotopic analyses. For the in situ macroalgal bioassay, a cage was made out of chicken-wire mesh and attached to a cinder block that was already placed on the forereef at ~ 12 m depth. At the time of the transplant experiment in July 2019, while some corals were still bleached, ~ 40% had already died (S.J.H., 2020, pers. obs.). It was not possible to have a control bioassay, due to restrictions on deploying additional cinder blocks and the lack of non-bleached reefs at that time. The ten macroalgal specimens were deployed on the reef for ~ 3 weeks from 15th July to 4th August 2019 before they were collected and returned to CRIOBE. Final tissue samples were taken and frozen before stable isotopic analyses were performed.

Stable isotopic analyses

All frozen samples from both studies were defrosted, rinsed thoroughly with fresh or distilled water, and placed in a drying oven for 48 h at 60 °C. Once dried, samples were each ground into a fine powder using a ball mill and stored in individual airtight containers. All dried samples were weighed, alongside the relevant standards, for stable isotopic analyses. Samples were then run on an IsoPrime Dual Analyser to determine signatures of stable isotopes and elemental content. The stable isotopic (δ15N) and elemental analyses (%N) for both the 2017 samples from the Seychelles study and the 2019 Mo’orea samples were run on an Isoprime100 Isotope Ratio Mass Spectrometer (IRMS) linked to an Elementar VARIO MICROcube Elemental Analyser at Lancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster University. The samples collected in 2014 from the Seychelles were analysed using a Costech Elemental Analyser fitted with a zero-blank auto-sampler at James Cook University’s Advanced Analytical Centre, Cairns. Analyses from both years were standardised using internal reference materials calibrated to international standards.

Statistical analyses

For the Seychelles data, four separate two-way analysis of variance (ANOVAs) were used to assess the effect of time period (two levels: 2014 and 2017), reef state (two levels: coral mortality and regime shift) and their interaction on (a) total coral cover, (b) branching coral cover, (c), δ15N and d) %N across all 13 reefs where Sargassum were consistently collected. Based on this analysis and subsequent post hoc Tukey tests, we found that predominant changes in these response variables were observed on “coral mortality” reefs, with little response on “regime-shifted” reefs. We therefore include the seven reefs with high levels of coral mortality to investigate the relationship between changes in nutrient signatures against a) absolute and b) branching coral cover loss, using linear regression models. This decision was further supported by coral cover changes on “regime-shifted” reefs, where starting absolute values in 2014 were already very low at 6.69 ± 1.8% before dropping by ~ 5% in 2017, and macroalgal cover was very high in both years. Therefore, any influence of coral cover on nutrient signatures in the system would be negligible (Suppl Fig. 3; Wilson et al. 2019).

Fig. 3
figure 3

Box and whisker plots of the median δ15N in Sargassum mangarevense tissue across three treatments from a short-term transplant experiment, showing the third quartile (Q3) and first quartile (Q1) range of the data, the whiskers (95% quartile) and data outliers. Connecting letters indicate significant differences between treatments. Stable isotopic signatures were measured in subset samples of the same specimens that were collected from a low-nutrient reef (initial), placed in laboratory aquaria to deplete internal nutrient stores for ~ 7 days (pre-transplant), before they were deployed on the bleached reef for 3 weeks (post-transplant) (n = 10)

For the Mo’orea data, differences between (a) average δ15N and (b) %N signatures in the Sargassum specimens in the three treatments (initial, pre-transplanted and post-transplanted) from the transplant experiment were analysed using a repeated measures ANOVA. Repeated measures were incorporated into this ANOVA as tissue samples were taken from the same experimental specimens placed under the three different treatments. A time series analysis was conducted to compare the average mean monthly SST in 2019, relative to SST in previous years. Normality of data was assessed visually, and homogeneity of variance for all ANOVAs conducted for both studies was assumed with a Levene’s test. All statistical analyses were conducted in R (R-Core-Team 2018), and the time series analyses for Mo’orea were performed using “zoo” and “xts” packages to produce Supplementary Fig. 2 (Zeileis and Grothendieck. 2005; Ryan and Ulrich 2020).

Results

Seychelles

There was a significant effect of year, reef state and interaction on total coral cover across the thirteen reefs (interaction: F1,204 = 37.3, p < 0.0001). The post hoc Tukey test revealed that there was no significant difference between the pre- and post-bleaching years for the “regime-shifted” reefs (p = 0.32; Suppl. Fig. 2). In contrast, the seven “coral mortality” reefs declined significantly from 27.0 ± 1.5 to 8.01 ± 0.5% between 2014 and 2017 (p < 0.0001; Fig. 1a). This was mainly due to a loss in branching coral cover on these reefs from 16.0 ± 1.5 to 0.30 ± 0.05% (p < 0.0001; Fig. 1a). Percent cover of massive corals remained similar between 2014 and 2017 on “coral mortality” reefs, whereas table coral cover declined from 1.27% to 0%. There was also a 0.8% increase in total macroalgal cover on the seven study reefs between the years.

The δ15N signature in Sargassum tissues differed significantly between 2014 and 2017 across all thirteen reefs (interaction between year and reef state, F1,124 = 11.4, p = 0.001), but only showed a significant difference for the seven “coral mortality” reefs between survey years (p < 0.0001, Fig. 1b; p = 0.15 for regime-shifted reefs). Similarly, %N in Sargassum tissues was higher in samples collected from “coral morality” reefs in 2017 than in 2014 (p < 0.0001, Fig. 1c; significant interaction between year and state F1,124 = 5.0, p = 0.03), although there was no temporal difference in N content in samples collected from “regime-shifted” reefs (p = 0.20). For the seven “coral mortality” reefs selected for the purpose of this study, there was a significant positive relationship between increase in δ15N in Sargassum tissue and (a) loss of total coral (adjusted r2 = 0.79; p = 0.004; Fig. 2) and (b) branching coral cover (adjusted r2 = 0.86; p = 0.002). There was no significant relationship between changes in %N and total coral cover (r2 = 0.04; p = 0.67) or branching coral cover (r2 = 0.04; p = 0.66).

Mo’orea

Before the bleaching event peaked in April 2019 (Suppl Fig. 2), the benthic cover survey conducted across the outer slopes of the four northern sites of Mo’orea in March 2019 showed an average of 73.7 ± 2.8% live coral cover, with a significant decline to an average of 36.2 ± 2.9% in 2020, a year after the event (p < 0.0001; Mean ± SE). The closest site to the transplant experiment, Tiahura, had 73.3 ± 5.5% and 36.0 ± 2.0% in live coral cover in 2019 and 2020, respectively. The high coral cover across the four sites in 2019 was primarily due to the abundance of branching coral Pocillopora on the forereefs in Mo’orea (Tsounis and Edmunds 2016). For instance, at Tiahura, there was 60.7 ± 5.7% cover of Pocillopora and an average of 55.5 ± 3.3% cover across the four sites in 2019. When the survey was repeated in March 2020, there was a significant decrease in Pocillopora to 24.5 ± 1.7% across all four sites (p < 0.0001), and a similar pattern was shown at Tiahura (p < 0.0001). Other than this predominant branching coral, no significant differences were found between the years for the other reef-associated organisms, including other coral genera.

In the short-term transplant experiment shortly after the peak of the bleaching event in Mo’orea, treatment had a significant effect on macroalgal δ15N signatures (repeated-measures ANOVA: F2,27 = 31.71, p < 0.0001; Fig. 3). Post hoc tests indicated that there were significant differences in δ15N between all three treatments (initial, pre-transplant and post-transplant, n = 10), which suggested that δ15N declined in the pre-transplant holding tanks, and then increased substantially on the transplant reef (initial and pre-transplant: p = 0.003; initial and post-transplant: p < 0.0001; pre-transplant and post-transplant: p < 0.0001). However, there was no significant effect of treatment on macroalgal %N (repeated-measures ANOVA: F2,23 = 0.6, p = 0.58; Suppl Fig. 4). Although it was not possible to include either control sites or reefs with varying levels of bleaching due to permit restrictions, the benthic data show that the extent of coral mortality across the outer slopes on the northern region of Mo’orea was quite similar.

Discussion

The current study suggests that mass coral mortality events can be detected through nitrogen isotopic signatures in macroalgal tissues, a proxy for nutrient sources, up to a year after a severe bleaching event. Although the exact source of the enrichment could not be traced in this study, a significant increase in δ15N was shown in both reef systems over different timescales after two separate coral mortality events. For instance, in the Seychelles, there was a strong positive correlation between a decline in total coral cover and an increase in δ15N. This suggested that the N present in algal tissues could be coral-derived. These findings may help improve understanding of how mass disturbances such as coral bleaching impact multiple ecosystem processes on climate-impacted reefs. For instance, the loss of live coral cover, especially branching corals, provides a large amount of new substrate for opportunistic species such as macroalgae and other primary producers to colonise and prevent coral recovery, and may also provide an additional source of nutrients which become locked in the system. Consequently, this could enhance macroalgal proliferation on this colonised space, reinforcing alternative regimes.

The isotopic signature of fleshy macroalgae changed significantly over both short and long timeframes following bleaching events on two different reef systems. The positive relationship between δ15N and the declines in coral cover suggest that nutrients from dead and decaying corals have contributed to this change of isotopic signatures in macroalgae. While this might be an important natural source of nutrients (Coffroth 1990; Brown and Bythell 2005; Bythell and Wild 2011), any substantial increase could affect or disrupt natural metabolic exchanges between corals and other organisms, not only with their endosymbiotic zooxanthellae, but with sponge, seaweed and microbial communities (de Goeij et al. 2013; Rix et al. 2016, 2017; Pawlik et al. 2016; Mumby and Steneck, 2018; Leggat et al. 2019). Much of the literature focuses on the mucus released from live corals and how it is recycled within the system (Davey et al. 2008; Naumann et al. 2009; Wild et al. 2004a, b, 2010, 2011), as well as the short term effects of changes in organic matter release after a bleaching event (Niggl et al. 2009; Wooldridge, 2009). Other work such as Radice et al. (2020) supports this by showing that isotopic signatures of particulate organic nitrogen in the water column decreased 8 months after a bleaching event. However, there is still little understanding of changes in reef biogeochemical cycles.

Excess nutrients are one of the key factors that can drive a bleached reef towards a regime shift (Graham et al. 2015). If the increased release of organic matter through mass coral mortality provides more nutrients to opportunistic species, this may encourage fast-growing macroalgae to proliferate on the exposed coral skeletons. This negative feedback loop can inhibit coral recovery and foster regime shifts to macroalgal-dominated states (Diaz-Pulido and McCook 2002; Haas et al. 2010; Wild et al. 2011). For instance, the lack of available substrata may reduce the ability for any coral larvae to colonise this space and repopulate reefs, whilst increases in algal-derived DOM and POM can subsequently increase pathogenic microbial activity through what has been termed the DDAM positive feedback loop (dissolved organic carbon, disease, algae, microorganisms) (Haas et al. 2016). Macroalgae release labile organic matter which benefit pathogenic microbes and together they create unfavourable conditions for corals. For example, they collectively disrupt the function of the coral holobiont, thereby exacerbating death of coral recruits, and maintaining competitive dominance in algae (Wild et al. 2010; Barott and Rohwer 2012; Pawlik et al. 2016; Mumby and Steneck 2018).

While mass mortality has the potential to release a substantial source of new nutrients, this type of organic matter is still considered to be internal, or autochthonous (Briand et al. 2015). Excessive nutrient enrichment from external anthropogenic nutrient loads, particularly certain types of nitrogen such as nitrates found in coastal runoff, can further exacerbate changes in biogeochemical cycles on reefs (Burkepile et al. 2020; Donovan et al. 2020). This could accelerate the proliferation of macroalgae and other opportunistic organisms, and further decrease the chance of scleractinian corals re-establishing themselves. In addition, declines in water quality can develop and cause the formation of algal blooms (Fabricius 2005; Tanaka et al. 2010).

Fleshy macroalgae are important indicators of changes in nutrient cycles because the bioavailable nutrients which are taken up from the water column and assimilated into their tissues can be easily measured over both short and long periods of time (Costanzo et al. 2001). Macroalgae have been used as proxies to study the effects of nutrient enrichment in both laboratory and in situ experiments, but these mostly tend to be for investigating anthropogenic sources, such as from coastal run-off (Fong et al. 1994; García-Seoane et al. 2018; Burkepile et al. 2020) and less commonly for natural nutrient inputs, such as seabird guano, deep-water upwelling events or coral-derived organic matter (Schaffelke, 2002; Graham et al. 2018; Williams et al. 2018).

The kind of nutrient signature used as a bioindicator is also an important factor to consider. Lin and Fong (2008) found δ15N to be a more sensitive indicator to changes in nutrients in transplanted macroalgae than %N. Nitrogen content is typically diluted during rapid growth of specimens, suggesting that nutrients are only stored in macroalgal tissues over the long term when nutrient supply exceeds growth rate, as they first must assimilate excess nitrogen into growth. This likely explains why we found no patterns in %N in either the Seychelles regression analysis, or the Mo’orea transplant experiment.

Although the duration of transplant experiments in the literature varies considerably, from hours to ~ 1 year, García-Seoane et al. (2018) recommended an exposure time of < 1 month, as the uptake kinetics of algal transplants can vary based on the species used or local environmental conditions. The current study suggests that these changes in nutrients may be detected in Sargassum tissues up to 12 months after an event, implying that nutrients have been trapped and retained in the system for at least a year. It is also known that Sargassum undergoes major seasonal fluctuations in production and biomass that may supplement adjoining ecosystems within the broader seascape (Fulton et al. 2019). This study supports previous literature, suggesting that macroalgae can easily be deployed in target areas to investigate changes in nutrient loads (Costanzo et al. 2001; García-Seoane et al. 2018), but also applies this common technique to capturing energetic resources. Therefore, macroalgal assays have the potential to provide insight into changes in nutrient sources from both natural and anthropogenic events, such as widespread coral bleaching.

There are a number of potential sources of nitrogen that could have influenced our results other than coral-derived nutrients. A strong nutrient gradient from the land-end of Opunohu Bay in Mo’orea to its ocean-end (Lin and Fong 2008) suggests that the nutrient enrichment from the shrimp farm effluent entering the bottom of the bay was unlikely to affect the isotopic signatures of our specimens. However, storms and heavy rainfall can influence both the spatial extent of run-off and nutrient uptake in reef macroalgae (Clausing and Fong 2016; Adam et al. 2021). Local upwelling could have provided nutrients and influenced our results, but Lin and Fong (2008) suggest that the δ15N of tropical ocean seawater is typically ~ 3 ‰, which is lower than the signatures found in both the post-transplant and pre-transplant tissue samples. In addition, no Sargassum specimens were found at the depth where the bleaching occurred in Mo’orea (~ 12 m), so specimens had to be taken from the nearby nutrient-limited lagoon (~ 1 m). Although this lagoon typically has low nutrient levels (Donovan et al. 2020) and the algal specimens collected from there had low tissue nutrient history, some bleaching was observed in the lagoon at the time of collection, but not in the specific area where the specimens were collected. Even if some coral-derived nutrients were captured by the initial specimens, we accounted for this by depleting tissue nutrient stores in the holding tanks. This resulted in a significant decline in δ15N, followed by a significantly higher signature in the post-treatment algae after they were transplanted at the site where extensive coral bleaching and mortality had occurred. Other factors such as light intensity can also affect algal condition and isotopic signatures (Marconi et al. 2011; García-Seoane et al. 2018), so may have also influenced results in Mo’orea.

Future research could build on this study, and on other studies in the literature (García-Seoane et al. 2018) by applying the above methods to test the degree of influence of coral-derived organic matter on macroalgal nutrient signatures, relative to anthropogenic sources, either in laboratory- or field-based experiments. For instance, macroalgal bioassays could be deployed on bleached reefs with low levels of coastal run-off, such as those in other regions around Mo’orea, and compared to those with significantly higher levels, to test if these effects are synergistic. Clearly, assessment of macroalgal isotope signatures across different nutrient loads and levels of coral mortality is required to fully understand nutrient sources before attribution of nitrogen enrichment in macroalgae to nutrients released from dead and decaying corals can be definitively determined.

While this study compared the δ15N signatures in tissues of Sargassum from pre- and post-bleaching years in the Seychelles, no macroalgal samples were collected during the bleaching and the subsequent mortality event in 2016 itself, so it was not possible to compare the stable isotopic results when this mass tissue release was occurring. The short-term experiment in Mo’orea was conducted in part to understand these shorter-term dynamics and to further support these findings. Though the results from the two different reef systems are not directly comparable, this study suggests that macroalgal tissue δ15N signatures can be affected by mass morality events. However, as the current study only implies that the mass release of dead coral tissue enriched the macroalgal δ15N signatures, future research could expand on this work by determining the exact source(s) of enrichment (Briand et al. 2015). For instance, enriched stable isotope tracers (15 N and 13C) (Naumann et al. 2010) or compound-specific stable isotopes (McMahon et al. 2016) could be used to quantify the flow of organic matter from dead corals to macroalgae in an experimental setting, or seawater from reefs with varying levels of coral mortality could be collected and used to test the responses of macroalgae.

In conclusion, this study highlights how mass coral mortality events, trigged by marine heat waves, may add additional sources of nutrients into coral reef biogeochemical cycles, which are available to opportunistic macroalgae. These changes in nutrient dynamics could have significant impacts on coral reefs, particularly if those sources are specifically becoming more available because key ecosystem engineers such as scleractinian corals are in decline (Wild et al. 2011). It also suggests that these nutrients can be retained within reefs and can have both short-term and long-term impacts on their biogeochemical cycles. Although it is not yet known how long these nutrients remain in the system, if other environmental conditions are favourable enough, then corals might still be able to recover (Graham et al. 2015). However, if these same reefs are also facing other local anthropogenic stressors, such as nutrient runoff or overfishing of herbivores, then large coral mortality events may result in competitive advantages to benthic organisms such as macroalgae, leading to a benthic regime shift (Ainsworth et al. 2019). This emphasises the critical need to manage local stressors by detecting and reducing nutrient runoff and other drivers, especially on reefs that do still have high abundance of corals, and/ or have recently bleached.