A standard unit for monitoring recruitment of fishes to coral reef rubble
We developed a benthic standard monitoring unit for recruitment of fishes (SMURF) to sample fishes that settle in coral rubble and tested it on three fringing reefs on the west coast of Barbados, West Indies. These rubble SMURFs are inexpensive to construct and permit newly settled fishes, including...
Saved in:
Published in | Journal of experimental marine biology and ecology Vol. 336; no. 2; pp. 171 - 183 |
---|---|
Main Authors | , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Amsterdam
Elsevier B.V
05.09.2006
Elsevier Science |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
Cover
Loading…
Summary: | We developed a benthic standard monitoring unit for recruitment of fishes (SMURF) to sample fishes that settle in coral rubble and tested it on three fringing reefs on the west coast of Barbados, West Indies. These rubble SMURFs are inexpensive to construct and permit newly settled fishes, including cryptic, secretive and small species, to be quickly and fairly completely (>
83%) removed by divers without returning the unit to the surface. Over a 3-month period involving 9 collections, 32 units on 3 reefs yielded 948 newly settled fishes belonging to 28 taxa (3.3
±
0.2 S.E. recruits per sample,
n
=
287) in addition to numerous crustaceans. Most specimens were
Sparisoma spp. (Scaridae) (41.8%) and
Stegastes partitus (Pomacentridae) (13.6%), with moderate numbers of
Scarus spp. (Scaridae) (8.6%),
Lythrypnus spp. (Gobiidae) (7.4%), and
Pseudogramma gregoryi (Serranidae) (7.2%). Sampling SMURFs at 1-day rather than 11-day intervals yielded approximately twice as many fish, although some taxa were not affected by sampling frequency, indicating taxon-specific differences in post-settlement loss rates. Netting, intended to reduce predation on settlers, did not affect settlement estimates unless algae grew on it, suggesting that the SMURF design minimizes fish predation even in the absence of the netting. Over time, however, the netting resulted in substantial algal growth that was associated with an increase in abundance of
Sparisoma spp. and a decrease in the abundance of
S. partitus. This suggests that settler estimates are more affected by microhabitat changes from algal growth than by predation. During low settlement periods, SMURFs performed better than light-traps in assessing the daily input of new settlers of two abundant taxa. Eight SMURFs per reef were sufficient to demonstrate differences in settlement rates and temporal correlations in settlement within and among reefs. This study underscores the potential of benthic SMURFs to measure settlement of coral reef fishes at a range of spatio-temporal scales with moderate research cost and effort, and to facilitate the study of the settlement stage of several taxa. |
---|---|
Bibliography: | ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 23 |
ISSN: | 0022-0981 1879-1697 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jembe.2006.05.005 |