Patterns of recovery in catastrophically disturbed reef fish assemblages

Direct and lethal natural disturbances to coral reef fish assemblages are rare, as the fishes mobility usually allows for rapid migration away from such events. However, in 1989 and again in 2002, coral spawn ‘slicks’ off Coral Bay in Western Australia caused many reef organisms to be asphyxiated re...

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Main Authors: Halford, Andy, Perret, J.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Inter-Research 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/30242
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author Halford, Andy
Perret, J.
author_facet Halford, Andy
Perret, J.
author_sort Halford, Andy
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Direct and lethal natural disturbances to coral reef fish assemblages are rare, as the fishes mobility usually allows for rapid migration away from such events. However, in 1989 and again in 2002, coral spawn ‘slicks’ off Coral Bay in Western Australia caused many reef organisms to be asphyxiated resulting in catastrophic mortality. A survey in 2002 revealed significant recovery of hard corals within the area disturbed in 1989 (6 to 32%), but little recovery of the fish assemblages with their structure being highly skewed towards herbivorous species. The lack of recovery in the fish assemblages was unexpected for 2 reasons: (1) the existence of healthy fish populations in adjacent areas and (2) the well-known positive association between many species of reef fish and their benthic habitat. We identified a combination of minimal recruitment to the disturbed area of the bay and a significantly changed coral community structure to be likely causes of the prolonged recovery process. Although just as lethal to the reef community, the 2002 disturbance was significantly smaller and patchy in its extent. In contrast to the 1989 event, the overall effects of this smaller disturbance were positive with species richness and abundance of fish increasing during the weeks after the event, primarily via migration from nearby areas of reef. Together, these results demonstrate the importance of scale when defining disturbance outcomes on coral reefs and highlight the significant role that ‘local’ factors can play in mediating outcomes from disturbance. This type of information is especially pertinent to reef managers trying to formulate effective plans for conservation of their local reef systems.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-302422017-09-13T15:30:24Z Patterns of recovery in catastrophically disturbed reef fish assemblages Halford, Andy Perret, J. Herbivores Coral spawning Recruitment Community dynamics Disturbance Monitoring Direct and lethal natural disturbances to coral reef fish assemblages are rare, as the fishes mobility usually allows for rapid migration away from such events. However, in 1989 and again in 2002, coral spawn ‘slicks’ off Coral Bay in Western Australia caused many reef organisms to be asphyxiated resulting in catastrophic mortality. A survey in 2002 revealed significant recovery of hard corals within the area disturbed in 1989 (6 to 32%), but little recovery of the fish assemblages with their structure being highly skewed towards herbivorous species. The lack of recovery in the fish assemblages was unexpected for 2 reasons: (1) the existence of healthy fish populations in adjacent areas and (2) the well-known positive association between many species of reef fish and their benthic habitat. We identified a combination of minimal recruitment to the disturbed area of the bay and a significantly changed coral community structure to be likely causes of the prolonged recovery process. Although just as lethal to the reef community, the 2002 disturbance was significantly smaller and patchy in its extent. In contrast to the 1989 event, the overall effects of this smaller disturbance were positive with species richness and abundance of fish increasing during the weeks after the event, primarily via migration from nearby areas of reef. Together, these results demonstrate the importance of scale when defining disturbance outcomes on coral reefs and highlight the significant role that ‘local’ factors can play in mediating outcomes from disturbance. This type of information is especially pertinent to reef managers trying to formulate effective plans for conservation of their local reef systems. 2009 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/30242 10.3354/meps07996 Inter-Research unknown
spellingShingle Herbivores
Coral spawning
Recruitment
Community dynamics
Disturbance
Monitoring
Halford, Andy
Perret, J.
Patterns of recovery in catastrophically disturbed reef fish assemblages
title Patterns of recovery in catastrophically disturbed reef fish assemblages
title_full Patterns of recovery in catastrophically disturbed reef fish assemblages
title_fullStr Patterns of recovery in catastrophically disturbed reef fish assemblages
title_full_unstemmed Patterns of recovery in catastrophically disturbed reef fish assemblages
title_short Patterns of recovery in catastrophically disturbed reef fish assemblages
title_sort patterns of recovery in catastrophically disturbed reef fish assemblages
topic Herbivores
Coral spawning
Recruitment
Community dynamics
Disturbance
Monitoring
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/30242