Abundance, diversity, and feeding behavior of coral reef buterflyfishes at Lord Howe Island

Endemic species are assumed to have a high risk of extinction because their restricted geographic range is often associated with low abundance and high ecological specialization. This study examines the abundance of Chaetodon butterflyfishes at Lord Howe Island in the south-west Pacific, and compare...

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Main Authors: Pratchett, M., Hoey, A., Cvitanovic, C., Hobbs, Jean-Paul, Fulton, C.
Format: Journal Article
Published: John Wiley & Sons 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/46338
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author Pratchett, M.
Hoey, A.
Cvitanovic, C.
Hobbs, Jean-Paul
Fulton, C.
author_facet Pratchett, M.
Hoey, A.
Cvitanovic, C.
Hobbs, Jean-Paul
Fulton, C.
author_sort Pratchett, M.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Endemic species are assumed to have a high risk of extinction because their restricted geographic range is often associated with low abundance and high ecological specialization. This study examines the abundance of Chaetodon butterflyfishes at Lord Howe Island in the south-west Pacific, and compares interspecific differences in local abundance to the feeding behavior and geographic range of these species. Contrary to expected correlations between abundance and geographic range, the single most abundant species of butterflyfish was Chaetodon tricinctus, which is endemic to Lord Howe Island and adjacent reefs; densities of C. tricinctus (14.1 ± 2.1 SE fish per 200m2) were >3 times higher than the next most abundant butterflyfish (Chaetodon melannotus), and even more abundant than many other geographically widespread species. Dietary breadth for the five dominant butterflyfishes at Lord Howe Island was weakly and generally negative correlated with abundance.The endemic C. tricinctus was a distinct outlier in this relationship, though our extensive feeding observations suggest some issues with the measurements of dietary breadth for this species. Field observations revealed that all bites taken on benthic substrates by C. tricinctus were from scleractinian corals, but adults rarely, if ever, took bites from the benthos, suggesting that they may be feeding nocturnally and/or using mid-water prey, such as plankton. Alternatively, the energetic demands of C. tricinctus may be fundamentally different to other coral-feeding butterflyfishes. Neither dietary specialization nor geographic range accounts for interspecific variation in abundance of coral reef butterflyfishes at Lord Howe Island, while much more work on the foraging behavior and population dynamics of C. tricinctus will be required to understand its’ abundance at this location.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-463382017-09-13T15:07:14Z Abundance, diversity, and feeding behavior of coral reef buterflyfishes at Lord Howe Island Pratchett, M. Hoey, A. Cvitanovic, C. Hobbs, Jean-Paul Fulton, C. disturbance corallivore schooling Chaetodontidae ecological function specialization selectivity endemism Endemic species are assumed to have a high risk of extinction because their restricted geographic range is often associated with low abundance and high ecological specialization. This study examines the abundance of Chaetodon butterflyfishes at Lord Howe Island in the south-west Pacific, and compares interspecific differences in local abundance to the feeding behavior and geographic range of these species. Contrary to expected correlations between abundance and geographic range, the single most abundant species of butterflyfish was Chaetodon tricinctus, which is endemic to Lord Howe Island and adjacent reefs; densities of C. tricinctus (14.1 ± 2.1 SE fish per 200m2) were >3 times higher than the next most abundant butterflyfish (Chaetodon melannotus), and even more abundant than many other geographically widespread species. Dietary breadth for the five dominant butterflyfishes at Lord Howe Island was weakly and generally negative correlated with abundance.The endemic C. tricinctus was a distinct outlier in this relationship, though our extensive feeding observations suggest some issues with the measurements of dietary breadth for this species. Field observations revealed that all bites taken on benthic substrates by C. tricinctus were from scleractinian corals, but adults rarely, if ever, took bites from the benthos, suggesting that they may be feeding nocturnally and/or using mid-water prey, such as plankton. Alternatively, the energetic demands of C. tricinctus may be fundamentally different to other coral-feeding butterflyfishes. Neither dietary specialization nor geographic range accounts for interspecific variation in abundance of coral reef butterflyfishes at Lord Howe Island, while much more work on the foraging behavior and population dynamics of C. tricinctus will be required to understand its’ abundance at this location. 2014 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/46338 10.1002/ece3.1208 John Wiley & Sons fulltext
spellingShingle disturbance
corallivore
schooling
Chaetodontidae
ecological function
specialization
selectivity
endemism
Pratchett, M.
Hoey, A.
Cvitanovic, C.
Hobbs, Jean-Paul
Fulton, C.
Abundance, diversity, and feeding behavior of coral reef buterflyfishes at Lord Howe Island
title Abundance, diversity, and feeding behavior of coral reef buterflyfishes at Lord Howe Island
title_full Abundance, diversity, and feeding behavior of coral reef buterflyfishes at Lord Howe Island
title_fullStr Abundance, diversity, and feeding behavior of coral reef buterflyfishes at Lord Howe Island
title_full_unstemmed Abundance, diversity, and feeding behavior of coral reef buterflyfishes at Lord Howe Island
title_short Abundance, diversity, and feeding behavior of coral reef buterflyfishes at Lord Howe Island
title_sort abundance, diversity, and feeding behavior of coral reef buterflyfishes at lord howe island
topic disturbance
corallivore
schooling
Chaetodontidae
ecological function
specialization
selectivity
endemism
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/46338