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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Coral reefs can exist as coral- and macroalgae-dominated habitats often separated
by only a few hundred metres. While herbivorous fish are known to depress the abundance of
algae and help maintain the function of coral-dominated habitats, less is known about their
influence in algae-dominated habitats. Here, we quantified herbivorous fish and benthic algal
communities over a 6 mo period in coral-dominated (back-reef) and algal-dominated (lagoon)
habitats in a relatively undisturbed fringing coral reef (Ningaloo, Western Australia). Simulta -
neously, we tested the effects of herbivorous fish on algal recruitment in both habitats using
recruitment tiles and fish exclusion cages. The composition of established algal communities
differed consistently between habitats, with the back-reef hosting a more diverse community than
the Sargassum-dominated lagoon. However, total algal biomass and cover only differed between
habitats in autumn, coinciding with maximum Sargassum biomass. The back-reef hosted high
coral cover and a diverse herbivorous fish community, with herbivore biomass an order of magnitude
greater than the lagoon. Despite these differences in herbivore composition, exclusion of
large herbivores had a similar positive effect to foliose macroalgae recruitment on experimental
tiles in both back-reef and lagoon habitats. Additionally, territorial damselfish found in the backreef
increased turf algae cover and decreased crustose coralline algae cover on recruitment tiles.
Collectively, our results show that disparate herbivorous fish communities in coral- and algaedominated
habitats are similarly able to limit the recruitment of foliose macroalgae, but suggest
that when herbivorous fish biomass and diversity are relatively low, macroalgal communities are
able to escape herbivore control through increased growth.
Description
Keywords
Functional group Recruitment Macroalgae Sargassum Turf algae Crustose coralline algae Ecosystem function Ningaloo
Pedagogical Context
Citation
Publisher
Inter Research