Non‐reef habitats in a tropical seascape affect density and biomass of fishes on coral reefs

Abstract Nonreef habitats such as mangroves, seagrass, and macroalgal beds are important for foraging, spawning, and as nursery habitat for some coral reef fishes. The spatial configuration of nonreef habitats adjacent to coral reefs can therefore have a substantial influence on the distribution and...

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Main Authors: Katie T. Sievers, Eva C. McClure, Rene A. Abesamis, Garry R. Russ
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-12-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6940
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spelling doaj-4c52d321ebde4477ab52daad7a6589982021-06-04T07:10:37ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582020-12-011024136731368610.1002/ece3.6940Non‐reef habitats in a tropical seascape affect density and biomass of fishes on coral reefsKatie T. Sievers0Eva C. McClure1Rene A. Abesamis2Garry R. Russ3College of Science and Engineering James Cook University Townsville QLD AustraliaCollege of Science and Engineering James Cook University Townsville QLD AustraliaSilliman University Angelo King Center for Research and Environmental Management Silliman University Dumaguete City PhilippinesCollege of Science and Engineering James Cook University Townsville QLD AustraliaAbstract Nonreef habitats such as mangroves, seagrass, and macroalgal beds are important for foraging, spawning, and as nursery habitat for some coral reef fishes. The spatial configuration of nonreef habitats adjacent to coral reefs can therefore have a substantial influence on the distribution and composition of reef fish. We investigate how different habitats in a tropical seascape in the Philippines influence the presence, density, and biomass of coral reef fishes to understand the relative importance of different habitats across various spatial scales. A detailed seascape map generated from satellite imagery was combined with field surveys of fish and benthic habitat on coral reefs. We then compared the relative importance of local reef (within coral reef) and adjacent habitat (habitats in the surrounding seascape) variables for coral reef fishes. Overall, adjacent habitat variables were as important as local reef variables in explaining reef fish density and biomass, despite being fewer in number in final models. For adult and juvenile wrasses (Labridae), and juveniles of some parrotfish taxa (Chlorurus), adjacent habitat was more important in explaining fish density and biomass. Notably, wrasses were positively influenced by the amount of sand and macroalgae in the adjacent seascape. Adjacent habitat metrics with the highest relative importance were sand (positive), macroalgae (positive), and mangrove habitats (negative), and fish responses to these metrics were consistent across fish groups evaluated. The 500‐m spatial scale was selected most often in models for seascape variables. Local coral reef variables with the greatest importance were percent cover of live coral (positive), sand (negative), and macroalgae (mixed). Incorporating spatial metrics that describe the surrounding seascape will capture more holistic patterns of fish–habitat relationships on reefs. This is important in regions where protection of reef fish habitat is an integral part of fisheries management but where protection of nonreef habitats is often overlooked.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6940coral reeffish ecologymarine reservesontogenyseascapespatial analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Katie T. Sievers
Eva C. McClure
Rene A. Abesamis
Garry R. Russ
spellingShingle Katie T. Sievers
Eva C. McClure
Rene A. Abesamis
Garry R. Russ
Non‐reef habitats in a tropical seascape affect density and biomass of fishes on coral reefs
Ecology and Evolution
coral reef
fish ecology
marine reserves
ontogeny
seascape
spatial analysis
author_facet Katie T. Sievers
Eva C. McClure
Rene A. Abesamis
Garry R. Russ
author_sort Katie T. Sievers
title Non‐reef habitats in a tropical seascape affect density and biomass of fishes on coral reefs
title_short Non‐reef habitats in a tropical seascape affect density and biomass of fishes on coral reefs
title_full Non‐reef habitats in a tropical seascape affect density and biomass of fishes on coral reefs
title_fullStr Non‐reef habitats in a tropical seascape affect density and biomass of fishes on coral reefs
title_full_unstemmed Non‐reef habitats in a tropical seascape affect density and biomass of fishes on coral reefs
title_sort non‐reef habitats in a tropical seascape affect density and biomass of fishes on coral reefs
publisher Wiley
series Ecology and Evolution
issn 2045-7758
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Abstract Nonreef habitats such as mangroves, seagrass, and macroalgal beds are important for foraging, spawning, and as nursery habitat for some coral reef fishes. The spatial configuration of nonreef habitats adjacent to coral reefs can therefore have a substantial influence on the distribution and composition of reef fish. We investigate how different habitats in a tropical seascape in the Philippines influence the presence, density, and biomass of coral reef fishes to understand the relative importance of different habitats across various spatial scales. A detailed seascape map generated from satellite imagery was combined with field surveys of fish and benthic habitat on coral reefs. We then compared the relative importance of local reef (within coral reef) and adjacent habitat (habitats in the surrounding seascape) variables for coral reef fishes. Overall, adjacent habitat variables were as important as local reef variables in explaining reef fish density and biomass, despite being fewer in number in final models. For adult and juvenile wrasses (Labridae), and juveniles of some parrotfish taxa (Chlorurus), adjacent habitat was more important in explaining fish density and biomass. Notably, wrasses were positively influenced by the amount of sand and macroalgae in the adjacent seascape. Adjacent habitat metrics with the highest relative importance were sand (positive), macroalgae (positive), and mangrove habitats (negative), and fish responses to these metrics were consistent across fish groups evaluated. The 500‐m spatial scale was selected most often in models for seascape variables. Local coral reef variables with the greatest importance were percent cover of live coral (positive), sand (negative), and macroalgae (mixed). Incorporating spatial metrics that describe the surrounding seascape will capture more holistic patterns of fish–habitat relationships on reefs. This is important in regions where protection of reef fish habitat is an integral part of fisheries management but where protection of nonreef habitats is often overlooked.
topic coral reef
fish ecology
marine reserves
ontogeny
seascape
spatial analysis
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6940
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