Coral reef habitat complexity decreases and diversifies local availability of light
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The spatial distribution of environmental conditions can determine where organisms can and cannot live. When the distribution of microhabitats within a landscape is mediated by the shape of its surface, structural complexity can indirectly affect environmental niche distributions. This study investigates how light availability patterns change along a gradient of landscape complexity measured as surface rugosity and height range in tropical shallow reefs. We used 260,000 high frequency and high spatial resolution light measurements across 903 locations to determine the proportion of light that is available at the reef surface. We find that light available on the reef surface is highly variable, with close locations within reef sites experiencing up to 25.7 mol/m 2 d of daily photon input difference. After accounting for light attenuation due depth, light availability decreases with increasing surface rugosity: a unit increase in local surface rugosity corresponds to an 11-29% decrease in light availability. Local surface complexity can affect the distributions of light availability at local scales, while broader extent site metrics do not capture this variability. Our results suggest that structural complexity enhances local environmental variability, and its indirect effects on other environmental variables and their interactions are essential for understanding ecosystem processes.