Projects per year
Abstract
The process of coral recruitment is crucial to the healthy functioning of coral reef ecosystems, as well as recovery following disturbances. Fishes are key modulators of this process by feeding on algae and other benthic taxa that compete with corals for benthic space. However, foraging strategies within reef fish assemblages are highly diverse and the effect of foraging diversity on coral recruitment success remains poorly understood. Here, we test how the foraging traits of reef fishes affect coral settlement and juvenile success at Lizard Island, Great Barrier Reef. Using a multi-model inference approach incorporating six metrics of fish assemblage foraging diversity (foraging rates, trait richness, trait evenness, trait divergence, herbivore abundance, and benthic invertivore abundance), we found that herbivore abundance had positive effects on both coral settlement and recruitment success. However, foraging trait diversity had a negative effect on coral settlement but not on recruitment. Coral settlement was higher at sites with less trait diverse fish assemblages, specifically in trait divergence and richness. Moreover, these two trait diversity metrics were stronger predictors of coral settlement success compared to herbivore abundance. Our findings provide evidence that impacts mediated by fish foraging on coral juveniles can potentially be harmful during settlement, but the space-clearing effect overall remains advantageous. We show here that the variation of fish biodiversity across reefs can be a partial driver to spatially uneven patterns of coral recruitment and reef recovery.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Publisher | bioRxiv |
| Number of pages | 33 |
| Publication status | Published - 21 Oct 2021 |
Keywords
- Reef fish
- Trait diversity
- Foraging impact
- Recruitment dynamics
- Herbivory
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Dive into the research topics of 'Coral settlement and recruitment responses to reef fish foraging and trait diversity'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.-
Leverhulme Centre for Anthropocene Bio: Leverhulme Centre for Anthropocene Biodiversity
Dornelas, M. (PI)
1/05/19 → 30/04/29
Project: Standard
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Why are complex environments more diver: Why are complex environments more diverse
Dornelas, M. (PI)
1/10/20 → 30/09/23
Project: Standard
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Extended Evolutionary Synthesis: Putting the Extended Evolutionary Synthesis to the test
Dornelas, M. (PI)
1/09/16 → 31/05/19
Project: Standard
Datasets
Research output
- 1 Article
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Coral settlement and recruitment are negatively related to reef fish trait diversity
Chow, C. F. Y., Bolton, C., Boutros, N., Brambilla, V., Fontoura, L., S Hoey, A., S Madin, J., Pizarro, O., Torres-Pulliza, D., M Woods, R., JA Zawada, K., Borges Da Costa Guint Barbosa, M. & Dornelas , M., 1 Apr 2023, In: Coral Reefs. 42, 2, p. 519-533 15 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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