Environmental disturbance events drive declines in juvenile wrasse biomass on inshore coral reefs of the Great Barrier Reef

被引:0
作者
J. R. Lowe
D. H. Williamson
D. M. Ceccarelli
R. D. Evans
G. R. Russ
机构
[1] College of Science and Engineering,Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies
[2] James Cook University,Oceans Institute
[3] James Cook University,undefined
[4] Marine Science Program,undefined
[5] Department of Biodiversity,undefined
[6] Conservation and Attractions,undefined
[7] Kensington,undefined
[8] the University of Western Australia,undefined
来源
Environmental Biology of Fishes | 2020年 / 103卷
关键词
Coral bleaching; Cyclones; Fishing; Great barrier reef; Marine reserves; Wrasses;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Environmental disturbances and fishing are well known drivers of coral reef fish population size, length-frequency, and assemblage structure. However, few studies have partitioned the spatial and temporal impacts of multiple disturbance events and long-term no-take marine reserve (NTMR) protection on the biomass of juvenile and adult reef-fishes based on the known size of sexual maturity. Here, we document responses in the biomass of juvenile and adult wrasses (Labridae) Hemigymnus melapterus, H. fasciatus, Cheilinus fasciatus, and Oxycheilinus digramma, to environmental disturbance events, NTMR protection, and predator density on inshore fringing coral reefs at the Palm and Whitsunday Island groups, Great Barrier Reef (GBR), Australia from 2007 to 2018 (12 years). The biomass of juvenile and adult wrasses on inshore GBR reefs were driven predominantly by benthic habitat associations, rather than by NTMR protection or density of wrasse predators (Plectropomus spp.). Despite similar species-specific associations of juvenile and adult wrasses with benthic cover, juvenile wrasse biomass consistently declined following coral bleaching and cyclone events. Conversely, adult wrasses had variable responses to disturbance events, including some increases in biomass. Disturbance-mediated declines in the biomass of juvenile wrasses are likely to generate ongoing reductions in the abundance of these species on inshore GBR reefs. Our findings provide further evidence that habitat loss impacts a range of coral reef fishes beyond those that are directly reliant upon live coral. Shifts in assemblage structure, loss of biodiversity, and reductions in fishery productivity will become increasingly apparent in coral reef ecosystems if anthropogenic global warming continues unabated.
引用
收藏
页码:1279 / 1293
页数:14
相关论文
共 34 条
  • [31] Temperature and light patterns at four reefs along the Great Barrier Reef during the 2015-2016 austral summer: understanding patterns of observed coral bleaching
    Bainbridge, Scott J.
    JOURNAL OF OPERATIONAL OCEANOGRAPHY, 2017, 10 (01) : 16 - 29
  • [32] Estimating the Exposure of Coral Reefs and Seagrass Meadows to Land-Sourced Contaminants in River Flood Plumes of the Great Barrier Reef: Validating a Simple Satellite Risk Framework with Environmental Data
    Petus, Caroline
    Devlin, Michelle
    Thompson, Angus
    McKenzie, Len
    da Silva, Eduardo Teixeira
    Collier, Catherine
    Tracey, Dieter
    Martin, Katherine
    REMOTE SENSING, 2016, 8 (03)
  • [33] Seasonal to decadal scale influence of environmental drivers on Ba/Ca and Y/Ca in coral aragonite from the southern Great Barrier Reef
    Saha, Narottam
    Rodriguez-Ramirez, Alberto
    Ai Duc Nguyen
    Clark, Tara R.
    Zhao, Jian-xin
    Webb, Gregory E.
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2018, 639 : 1099 - 1109
  • [34] Rates of decline and recovery of coral cover on reefs impacted by, recovering from and unaffected by crown-of-thorns starfish Acanthaster planci:: a regional perspective of the Great Barrier Reef
    Lourey, MJ
    Ryan, DAJ
    Miller, IR
    MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES, 2000, 196 : 179 - 186