Coral Reefs: 2001 Publications
Author: Williams,
I.D., Polunin, N.V.C., and Hendrick, V.J.
Title: Limits
to grazing by herbivorous fishes and the impact of low coral cover on macroalgal
abundance on a coral reef in Belize.
Publication: Marine
Ecology Progress Series 222: 187-196, 2001.
© Inter-Research
Notes:
Widespread rises in the abundance
of fleshy macroalgae on Caribbean reefs within the last 20 yr have variously
been attributed to eutrophication, overfishing, or the 1983-4 mass mortality
of the grazing sea urchin Diadema antillarum. However, none
of those factors can satisfactorily explain why macroalgae are abundant today
even on lightly fished mid-depth reefs in sparsely populated areas. Here we
explore another explanation for rises in macroalgal cover on such reefs, namely
that they are a side effect of declines in coral cover. We suggest that grazing
by herbivorous fishes can exclude macroalgae from mid-depth reefs with high
cover of hard corals, but that on low-cover reefs, the amount of space occupied
by algae overwhelms the ability of grazing fishes to crop it down. We simulated
the effect of 10% and 25% rises in coral cover by attaching 'pseudo-corals'
(PVC tiles covered in a non-toxic anti-fouling coating) to reef substratum
in 5 x 5 m plots (3 groups: control, 10%T and 25%T) on a 12 m deep forereef
site in front of Ambergris Caye, Belize. Within 3 mo of attaching tiles, macroalgae
had declined by approximately 10% in 10%T plots and 25% in 25%T plots compared
with control plots, and these new states persisted for the duration of the
experiment (macro-algae averaging 38.0% in control plots, 28.7% in 10%T plots,
and 13.6% in 25%T plots). Dramatic reductions in macroalgae may have made
the 25%T plots more attractive to herbivorous fishes, as, in the later stages
of the experiment, herbivorous fish biomass and acanthurid feeding rate were
higher in those plots than in 10%T and control plots.
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