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RESEARCH PRODUCT

The influence of light attenuation on the biogeomorphology of a marine karst cave: A case study of Puerto Princesa Underground River, Palawan, the Philippines

Larissa A. NaylorMartin A. CoombesEmanuela Claudia La MarcaFrancesco SauroLeonardo PicciniJo De Waele

subject

Settore BIO/07 - Ecologiageographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryBiogeomorphologyPhototrophEcologyEndolithbioerosionSettore GEO/04 - Geografia Fisica E GeomorfologiaBioerosionmicrobiologykarstbiogeomorphologySettore BIO/19 - Microbiologia GeneraleKarsthumanitiesCaveHabitatmarine caveLichenGeologyBiogeomorphology Marine cave Microbiology Bioerosion Karst PalawanEarth-Surface Processes

description

Karst caves are unique biogeomorphological systems. Cave walls offer habitat for microorganisms which in-turn have a geomorphological role via their involvement in rock weathering, erosion and mineralisation. The attenuation of light with distance into caves is known to affect ecology, but the implications of this for biogeomorphological processes and forms have seldom been examined. Here we describe a semi-quantitative microscopy study comparing the extent, structure, and thickness of biocover and depth of endolithic penetration for samples of rock from the Puerto Princesa Underground River system in Palawan, the Philippines, which is a natural UNESCO World Heritage Site.\ud \ud Organic growth at the entrance of the cave was abundant (100% occurrence) and complex, dominated by phototrophic organisms (green microalgae, diatoms, cyanobacteria, mosses and lichens). Thickness of this layer was 0.28 ± 0.18 mm with active endolith penetration into the limestone (mean depth = 0.13 ± 0.03 mm). In contrast, phototrophs were rare 50 m into the cave and biofilm cover was significantly thinner (0.01 ± 0.01 mm, p < 0.000) and spatially patchy (33% occurrence). Endolithic penetration here was also shallower (< 0.01 mm, p < 0.000) and non-uniform. Biofilm was found 250 m into the cave, but with a complete absence of phototrophs and no evidence of endolithic bioerosion.\ud \ud We attribute these findings to light-induced stress gradients, showing that the influence of light on phototroph abundance has knock-on consequences for the development of limestone morphological features. In marine caves this includes notches, which were most well-developed at the sheltered cave entrance of our study site, and for which variability in formation rates between locations is currently poorly understood.

10.1016/j.geomorph.2014.10.007http://hdl.handle.net/11585/389370