Spatial Ecology of Reef Fishes Justin Welsh and David Bellwood.

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Spatial Ecology of Reef Fishes Justin Welsh and David Bellwood

Transcript of Spatial Ecology of Reef Fishes Justin Welsh and David Bellwood.

Page 1: Spatial Ecology of Reef Fishes Justin Welsh and David Bellwood.

Spatial Ecology of Reef Fishes

Justin Welsh and David Bellwood

Page 2: Spatial Ecology of Reef Fishes Justin Welsh and David Bellwood.

Roles on reefs: Herbivory

Introduction

•Transport sediment

•Maintain algal turfs

•Remove macroalgae

•Overall, support resilience

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Importance of resilience

Introduction

?

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Who and what... We think we know. But where and why?

Introduction

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Introduction

Haremic versus Schooling

What is the spatial ecology of roving herbivores and is there an influence of social systems?

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Introduction

Chlorurus microrhinos

•Haremic

•Roving herbivore

•Active telemetry

Case study: the parrotfishes

Scarus rivulatus

•Schooling

•Roving herbivore

•Passive telemetry

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•Algal removal

•Leave deep, long-lasting grazing scars

•Haremic

Introduction

Chlorurus microrhinos

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Objectives:

•Quantify home range size

•Determine the influence of physical factors

•Implications for ecosystem role

Introduction

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Study site: Orpheus Island, Pioneer Bay

Methods

Page 10: Spatial Ecology of Reef Fishes Justin Welsh and David Bellwood.

Capture

•Barrier netting

Methods

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Capture

Tagging

•Anesthetic

MS-222

•Tag

(V9T-2H, Vemco)

•Suture

Methods

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Tracking

•Tracking from Kayak

for 3 - 5 days(Meyer and Holland 2005)

•Receiver

(VR100, Vemco)

•Directional hydrophone

(VH1110, Vemco)

Methods

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Home range: 8,100 m2

Core area: 1,690 m2

Results

Welsh and Bellwood 2012, Coral Reefs Vol: 31

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Core vs non-core: Physical characteristics:

Results

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Results:

*

*

Core area Non-core area *

*

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•Core areas centered on topographic complexity

•Limited mobility in haremic parrotfish

•What about schooling species?

Summary

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Herbivores

• So far, highly site attached

• Social species?

• e.g. schooling?

Introduction

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Scarus rivulatus• Highly abundant

• Important herbivores

• Schooling species

• Roving herbivore?

Introduction

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Introduction

Objectives:

•Evaluate the foraging range of S. rivulatus

•Understand the foraging range of their schools

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Passive acoustic telemetry

Introduction

Heupel et al 2006

• VR2W receivers

• V9 transmitters

• 60 m detection rangeWelsh et al. 2012, Coral Reefs

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Orpheus island array

Methods

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Capture

• 3 schools captured using barrier nets

Methods

Tagging

• Same tagging procedure as per active tracking

• Monitor individuals for 7 months

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Spatial data analysis

• Maximum potential foraging range

Chapter 2

>5%>5% >5%>5%

<5%<5%

>5%>5% >5%>5%

<5%<5%

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Spatial range

Results

• Average area occupied: 0.244 km2

Welsh and Bellwood 2012, Coral Reefs

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Results

• Average area occupied by the school: 0.238 km2

Spatial range

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Conclusion

• Site attached

• Facultative schooling

• Limited school fidelity

Conclusion

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Introduction

Chlorurus microrhinos

•Haremic

•Site attached

Scarus rivulatus

•Schooling

•Site attached

Herbivores from a different perspective:Regardless of social system, functional role occurs

on small spatial scales

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Credits

David Bellwood, Roberta Bonaldo, Simon Brandl, Rebecca Fox. Chris Goatley, Andy Hoey, Jess Hopf, Charlotte Johansson, Michael Kramer, Susannah Leahy, Carine Lefèvre, Jenn Tanner, OIRS and LIRS staff and Vemco.Photos by Joao Paulo KrajewskiFunding provided by: ARC center of excellent for coral reef studies, Australian museum, James Cook University

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Schooling and feeding

• Feeding observations:

‣ 160 individuals, 1 min each, 4 times of the day, 2 sites

Results

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Significance of schooling

Results