Habitat zonation on coral reefs: Structural complexity, nutritional resources and herbivorous fish distributions.

Distinct zonation of community assemblages among habitats is a ubiquitous feature of coral reefs. The distribution of roving herbivorous fishes (parrotfishes, surgeonfishes and rabbitfishes) is a particularly clear example, with the abundance of these fishes generally peaking in shallow-water, high-...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Arun Oakley-Cogan, Sterling B Tebbett, David R Bellwood
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0233498
_version_ 1819017426325471232
author Arun Oakley-Cogan
Sterling B Tebbett
David R Bellwood
author_facet Arun Oakley-Cogan
Sterling B Tebbett
David R Bellwood
author_sort Arun Oakley-Cogan
collection DOAJ
description Distinct zonation of community assemblages among habitats is a ubiquitous feature of coral reefs. The distribution of roving herbivorous fishes (parrotfishes, surgeonfishes and rabbitfishes) is a particularly clear example, with the abundance of these fishes generally peaking in shallow-water, high-energy habitats, regardless of the biogeographic realm. Yet, our understanding of the factors which structure this habitat partitioning, especially with regards to different facets of structural complexity and nutritional resource availability, is limited. To address this issue, we used three-dimensional photogrammetry and structure-from-motion technologies to describe five components of structural complexity (rugosity, coral cover, verticality, refuge density and field-of-view) and nutritional resource availability (grazing surface area) among habitats and considered how these factors are related to herbivorous fish distributions. All complexity metrics (including coral cover) were highest on the slope and crest. Nutritional resource availability differed from this general pattern and peaked on the outer-flat. Unexpectedly, when compared to the distribution of herbivorous fishes, none of the complexity metrics had a marked influence in the models. However, grazing surface area was a strong predictor of both the abundance and biomass of herbivorous fishes. The strong relationship between grazing surface area and herbivorous fish distributions indicates that nutritional resource availability may be one of the primary factors driving the distribution of roving herbivorous fishes. The lack of a relationship between complexity and herbivorous fishes, and a strong affinity of herbivorous fishes for low-complexity, algal turf-dominated outer-flat habitats, offers some cautious optimism that herbivory may be sustained on future, low-complexity, algal turf-dominated reef configurations.
first_indexed 2024-12-21T03:03:20Z
format Article
id doaj.art-adb2364e3444402bb3da12ed94cffda8
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1932-6203
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-21T03:03:20Z
publishDate 2020-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS ONE
spelling doaj.art-adb2364e3444402bb3da12ed94cffda82022-12-21T19:18:08ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01156e023349810.1371/journal.pone.0233498Habitat zonation on coral reefs: Structural complexity, nutritional resources and herbivorous fish distributions.Arun Oakley-CoganSterling B TebbettDavid R BellwoodDistinct zonation of community assemblages among habitats is a ubiquitous feature of coral reefs. The distribution of roving herbivorous fishes (parrotfishes, surgeonfishes and rabbitfishes) is a particularly clear example, with the abundance of these fishes generally peaking in shallow-water, high-energy habitats, regardless of the biogeographic realm. Yet, our understanding of the factors which structure this habitat partitioning, especially with regards to different facets of structural complexity and nutritional resource availability, is limited. To address this issue, we used three-dimensional photogrammetry and structure-from-motion technologies to describe five components of structural complexity (rugosity, coral cover, verticality, refuge density and field-of-view) and nutritional resource availability (grazing surface area) among habitats and considered how these factors are related to herbivorous fish distributions. All complexity metrics (including coral cover) were highest on the slope and crest. Nutritional resource availability differed from this general pattern and peaked on the outer-flat. Unexpectedly, when compared to the distribution of herbivorous fishes, none of the complexity metrics had a marked influence in the models. However, grazing surface area was a strong predictor of both the abundance and biomass of herbivorous fishes. The strong relationship between grazing surface area and herbivorous fish distributions indicates that nutritional resource availability may be one of the primary factors driving the distribution of roving herbivorous fishes. The lack of a relationship between complexity and herbivorous fishes, and a strong affinity of herbivorous fishes for low-complexity, algal turf-dominated outer-flat habitats, offers some cautious optimism that herbivory may be sustained on future, low-complexity, algal turf-dominated reef configurations.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0233498
spellingShingle Arun Oakley-Cogan
Sterling B Tebbett
David R Bellwood
Habitat zonation on coral reefs: Structural complexity, nutritional resources and herbivorous fish distributions.
PLoS ONE
title Habitat zonation on coral reefs: Structural complexity, nutritional resources and herbivorous fish distributions.
title_full Habitat zonation on coral reefs: Structural complexity, nutritional resources and herbivorous fish distributions.
title_fullStr Habitat zonation on coral reefs: Structural complexity, nutritional resources and herbivorous fish distributions.
title_full_unstemmed Habitat zonation on coral reefs: Structural complexity, nutritional resources and herbivorous fish distributions.
title_short Habitat zonation on coral reefs: Structural complexity, nutritional resources and herbivorous fish distributions.
title_sort habitat zonation on coral reefs structural complexity nutritional resources and herbivorous fish distributions
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0233498
work_keys_str_mv AT arunoakleycogan habitatzonationoncoralreefsstructuralcomplexitynutritionalresourcesandherbivorousfishdistributions
AT sterlingbtebbett habitatzonationoncoralreefsstructuralcomplexitynutritionalresourcesandherbivorousfishdistributions
AT davidrbellwood habitatzonationoncoralreefsstructuralcomplexitynutritionalresourcesandherbivorousfishdistributions