Coral Reefs: 1996
Publications
Author:
Clarke, R.D.
Title: Population shifts in two competing fish
species on a degrading coral reef.
Publication: Marine Ecology Progress Series
137(1-3):51-58, 1996.
© Inter-Research.
Notes: I monitored
the populations of 2 fishes on a coral reef in St. Croix, U.S.
Virgin Islands, from 1980 to 1995 to determine if they could track
changes in their habitat. Starting in the mid- 1970s, white band
disease killed all the elkhorn corals Acropora palmate,
providing access to a variety of boring organisms that create the
cavities inhabited by the spinyhead blenny Acanthemblemaria
spinosa and the roughhead blenny A. aspera. As the
corals became more heavily bored, they were weakened and
collapsed, providing more of the low habitat occupied by
roughheads and less of the high habitat occupied by spinyheads.
This structural change was generally gradual but Hurricane Hugo
destroyed almost all the remaining standing dead corals in 1989.
Both species increased in density until 1989 when the sudden
reduction of high habitat caused a decrease in spinyhead
population density. In contrast, roughheads continued their
population growth until 1991 after which they also declined.
Although previous work has shown that spinyheads can displace
roughheads from preferred habitat, spinyheads did not increase
their numbers close to the reef surface as the high corals
collapsed. I hypothesize that their inflexible minimum height is
due to their previously demonstrated higher metabolic rate which
constrains them to the higher locations where planktonic food is
more abundant. Consequently, the species mix shifted from one of
spinyheads with extremely rare roughheads in 1980 to one dominated
by roughheads with few spinyheads in 1995. This precise tracking
of a changing environment suggests resource limitation and is
counter to the widespread view that coral reef fish assemblages
are largely unsaturated systems consisting of open,
recruitment-limited populations. The fishes studied here may be
atypical, however, and it is suggested that more studies with a
mechanistic approach may provide insight into reef fish assemblage
structure.
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