Fish movement drives spatial and temporal patterns of nutrient provisioning on coral reef patches

Abstract Nutrient provisioning by animals can be a major driver of primary productivity in ecosystems. Animal‐mediated nutrient sources are particularly important in nutrient‐poor systems such as coral reefs. However, aggregations of mobile animals might lead to temporal and spatial variability in l...

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Main Authors: Fiona T. Francis, Isabelle M. Côté
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2018-05-01
Series:Ecosphere
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.2225
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spelling doaj-071b89390da547039e9d3f93c2c74c8c2021-07-12T06:46:04ZengWileyEcosphere2150-89252018-05-0195n/an/a10.1002/ecs2.2225Fish movement drives spatial and temporal patterns of nutrient provisioning on coral reef patchesFiona T. Francis0Isabelle M. Côté1Earth to Ocean Research Group Department of Biological Sciences Simon Fraser University Burnaby British Columbia V5A 1S6 CanadaEarth to Ocean Research Group Department of Biological Sciences Simon Fraser University Burnaby British Columbia V5A 1S6 CanadaAbstract Nutrient provisioning by animals can be a major driver of primary productivity in ecosystems. Animal‐mediated nutrient sources are particularly important in nutrient‐poor systems such as coral reefs. However, aggregations of mobile animals might lead to temporal and spatial variability in local nutrient availability, which is not well understood. In this study, we quantified how patterns of fish movement and abundance influence the stability of nitrogen provisioning on Bahamian coral reefs. We empirically measured and modeled nitrogen excretion estimates for 16 coral reef fish communities and combined these measurements with fish abundance and behavioral observations to compare reef nutrient budgets on diel, monthly, and annual time scales. Diel reef nitrogen provisioning by fishes varied greatly, with diurnal rates being on average four times greater than nocturnal rates. Diurnal rates were highly variable among reefs and were driven primarily by migratory grunts (Haemulidae) resting over reefs during the day but foraging off reefs at night. At the reef scale, overall nitrogen excretion rates were correlated with grunt abundance; however, grunt abundance could not be predicted by any reef physical characteristics. Within‐reef grunt excretion rates changed little across a 4‐month period but varied significantly over two years, indicating that nutrient supply on a patch reef is not stable over long periods of time. Quantifying how nutrient provisioning on patch reefs is linked to fish activity and movement patterns and how provisioning varies on different spatial and temporal scales is important for understanding overall patterns of primary productivity on reefs.https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.2225consumer‐mediated nutrientscross‐ecosystem subsidiesdiel movementfish excretionnitrogen supplynutrient budgets
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fiona T. Francis
Isabelle M. Côté
spellingShingle Fiona T. Francis
Isabelle M. Côté
Fish movement drives spatial and temporal patterns of nutrient provisioning on coral reef patches
Ecosphere
consumer‐mediated nutrients
cross‐ecosystem subsidies
diel movement
fish excretion
nitrogen supply
nutrient budgets
author_facet Fiona T. Francis
Isabelle M. Côté
author_sort Fiona T. Francis
title Fish movement drives spatial and temporal patterns of nutrient provisioning on coral reef patches
title_short Fish movement drives spatial and temporal patterns of nutrient provisioning on coral reef patches
title_full Fish movement drives spatial and temporal patterns of nutrient provisioning on coral reef patches
title_fullStr Fish movement drives spatial and temporal patterns of nutrient provisioning on coral reef patches
title_full_unstemmed Fish movement drives spatial and temporal patterns of nutrient provisioning on coral reef patches
title_sort fish movement drives spatial and temporal patterns of nutrient provisioning on coral reef patches
publisher Wiley
series Ecosphere
issn 2150-8925
publishDate 2018-05-01
description Abstract Nutrient provisioning by animals can be a major driver of primary productivity in ecosystems. Animal‐mediated nutrient sources are particularly important in nutrient‐poor systems such as coral reefs. However, aggregations of mobile animals might lead to temporal and spatial variability in local nutrient availability, which is not well understood. In this study, we quantified how patterns of fish movement and abundance influence the stability of nitrogen provisioning on Bahamian coral reefs. We empirically measured and modeled nitrogen excretion estimates for 16 coral reef fish communities and combined these measurements with fish abundance and behavioral observations to compare reef nutrient budgets on diel, monthly, and annual time scales. Diel reef nitrogen provisioning by fishes varied greatly, with diurnal rates being on average four times greater than nocturnal rates. Diurnal rates were highly variable among reefs and were driven primarily by migratory grunts (Haemulidae) resting over reefs during the day but foraging off reefs at night. At the reef scale, overall nitrogen excretion rates were correlated with grunt abundance; however, grunt abundance could not be predicted by any reef physical characteristics. Within‐reef grunt excretion rates changed little across a 4‐month period but varied significantly over two years, indicating that nutrient supply on a patch reef is not stable over long periods of time. Quantifying how nutrient provisioning on patch reefs is linked to fish activity and movement patterns and how provisioning varies on different spatial and temporal scales is important for understanding overall patterns of primary productivity on reefs.
topic consumer‐mediated nutrients
cross‐ecosystem subsidies
diel movement
fish excretion
nitrogen supply
nutrient budgets
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.2225
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