Coral Reefs: 2002 Publications
Author: Friedlander,
A.M. and DeMartini, E.E.
Title: Contrasts
in density, size, and biomass of reef fishes between the northwestern and the
main Hawaiian islands: the effects of fishing down apex predators.
Publication: Marine
Ecology Progress Series 230: 253-264, 2002.
© Inter-Research
Notes:
A comparison
between the northwestern Hawaiian islands (NWHI), a large, remote, and lightly
fished area, and the main Hawaiian islands (MHI), an urbanized, heavily fished
area, revealed dramatic differences in the numerical density, size, and biomass
of the shallow reef fish assemblages. Grand mean fish standing stock in the
NWHI was more than 260% greater than in the MHI. The most striking difference
was the abundance and size of large apex predators (primarily sharks and jacks)
in the NWHI compared to the MHI. More than 54% of the total fish biomass in
the NWHI consisted of apex predators, whereas this trophic level accounted
for less than 3% of the fish biomass in the MHI. In contrast, fish biomass
in the MHI was dominated by herbivores (55%) and small-bodied lower-level
carnivores (42%). Most of the dominant species by weight in the NWHI were
either rare or absent in the MHI and the target species that were present,
regardless of trophic level, were nearly always larger in the NWHI. These
differences represent both near-extirpation of apex predators and heavy exploitation
of lower trophic levels in the MHI compared to the largely unfished NWHI.
The reefs in the NWHI are among the few remaining large-scale, intact, predator-dominated
reef ecosystems left in the world and offer an opportunity to understand how
unaltered ecosystems are structured, how they function, and how they can most
effectively be preserved. The differences in fish assemblage structure in
this study are evidence of the high level of exploitation in the MHI and the
pressing need for ecosystem-level management of reef systems in the MHI as
well as the NWHI.
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