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Book Species level Spatial and Temporal Dynamics of Coral Reef Fish Larvae in the Gulf of Aqaba

Download or read book Species level Spatial and Temporal Dynamics of Coral Reef Fish Larvae in the Gulf of Aqaba written by Naama Kimmerling Berenshtein and published by . This book was released on 2016 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Coral Reef Fishes

    Book Details:
  • Author : Peter F. Sale
  • Publisher : Academic Press
  • Release : 2002-05-15
  • ISBN : 0126151857
  • Pages : 567 pages

Download or read book Coral Reef Fishes written by Peter F. Sale and published by Academic Press. This book was released on 2002-05-15 with total page 567 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The Encyclopedia of Insects is a comprehensive work devoted to all aspects of insects, including their anatomy, physiology, evolution, behavior, reproduction, ecology, and disease, as well as issues of exploitation, conservation, and management. Articles provide definitive facts about all insects from aphids, beetles and butterflies to weevils and yellowjackets. Insects are beautiful and dreadful, ravenous pests and devastating disease vectors, resilient and resistant to eradication, and the source of great benefit and great loss for civilization. Important for ecosystem health, they have infl.

Book Temporal and Spatial Patterns in Coral Reef Soundscapes and Their Relevance for Larval Fish Orientation

Download or read book Temporal and Spatial Patterns in Coral Reef Soundscapes and Their Relevance for Larval Fish Orientation written by Erica Staaterman and published by . This book was released on 2015 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Most coral reef fish adults have limited home ranges, but their pelagic larvae have the potential to disperse over great distances. At the end of the pelagic phase, these larvae must seek appropriate settlement habitat. Which environmental signals do they use to find the reef? It has been suggested that fish larvae utilize a combination of visual, olfactory, and acoustic cues at different ontogenetic stages and different distances from the reef. At least ten experiments in the last decade have tested the response of reef fish larvae to sounds of a coral reef, resulting in more than 650 citations. This dissertation focuses on the potential role of acoustic cues in the orientation behavior of larval reef fish from the open ocean. First, a biophysical model was used to examine the consequences of orientation behavior if larvae could detect acoustic signals from 1-10 km from the reef. When larvae oriented early during ontogeny and from larger distances, they greatly increased their settlement success and settled closer to home. These findings suggest that early orientation is critical to the survival of fish larvae, which must be active agents of their own dispersal. Second, a time-series of coral reef soundscapes was conducted for two nearby coral reefs in the Northern Florida Keys. The reef soundscapes were highly variable over daily, lunar, and seasonal time-scales, and the highest amplitudes coincided with new moons of the wet season - the time when the larvae of most coral reef fish species settle. Interestingly, the wind-based contribution to the soundscape also had a lunar period. Third, an acoustic playback experiment was conducted at Dean's Blue Hole in the Bahamas, a relatively "quiet" environment. Larvae from Apogonidae (cardinalfish) and Acanthuridae (surgeonfish) families were exposed to reef sounds recorded in the Bahamas and in Florida and played back at ambient levels. The acanthurid species demonstrated no response to the playbacks, but the apogonids exhibited a disruption of their orientation behavior. This finding suggests that apogonids were able to detect the playbacks, but had no directional response, as was anticipated based on previous studies where sounds were broadcast at higher amplitudes. Finally, an acoustic propagation experiment was conducted in the Upper Florida Keys. Both acoustic pressure and particle acceleration diminished gradually with distance from the reef, but the amplitude of the signal, particularly for particle acceleration, was lower than the detection thresholds of most fish larvae. Furthermore, the particle acceleration field (measured 1-1000 m from the reef) was not highly directional, which may restrict the use of acoustic signals to animals that can detect acoustic pressure. These findings suggest that most fish larvae in the pelagic zone near Florida reefs would have a difficult time locating the reef using acoustic cues alone. However, this may not be the case for species with particularly sensitive hearing (e.g., those that can detect acoustic pressure), and for reefs with higher-amplitude soundscapes. The results of this study challenge research from the past decades that demonstrated a clear attraction of larval fishes to sounds played-back at high amplitudes. Further work is needed, specifically hearing thresholds in other fish larvae, and particle acceleration measurements over longer time periods and near additional coral reefs, to determine whether the trends found in the Florida Keys are consistent with other parts of the world.

Book Spatial and Temporal Dynamics of an Exploited Reef fish Population

Download or read book Spatial and Temporal Dynamics of an Exploited Reef fish Population written by Colin Graham Attwood and published by . This book was released on 2002 with total page 301 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Coral Reefs of the Red Sea

Download or read book Coral Reefs of the Red Sea written by Christian R. Voolstra and published by Springer. This book was released on 2019-05-07 with total page 179 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This volume is a complete review and reference work for scientists, engineers, and students concerned with coral reefs in the Red Sea. It provides an up-to-date review on the geology, ecology, and physiology of coral reef ecosystems in the Red Sea, including data from most recent molecular studies. The Red Sea harbours a set of unique ecological characteristics, such as high temperature, high alkalinity, and high salinity, in a quasi-isolated environment. This makes it a perfect laboratory to study and understand adaptation in regard to the impact of climate change on marine ecosystems. This book can be used as a general reference, guide, or textbook.

Book Population Dynamics of the Reef Crisis

Download or read book Population Dynamics of the Reef Crisis written by and published by Academic Press. This book was released on 2020-11-13 with total page 514 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Population Dynamics of the Reef Crisis, Volume 87 in the Advances in Marine Biology series, updates on many topics that will appeal to postgraduates and researchers in marine biology, fisheries science, ecology, zoology and biological oceanography. Chapters in this new release cover SCTL disease and coral population dynamics in S-Florida, Spatial dynamics of juvenile corals in the Persian/Arabian Gulf, Surprising stability in sea urchin populations following shifts to algal dominance on heavily bleached reefs, Biophysical model of population connectivity in the Persian Gulf, Population dynamics of 20-year decline in clownfish anemones on coral reefs at Eilat, northern Red Sea, and much more. - Reviews articles on the latest advances in marine biology - Authored by leading figures in their respective fields of study - Presents materials that are widely used by managers, students and academic professionals in the marine sciences

Book Reef Fish Spawning Aggregations  Biology  Research and Management

Download or read book Reef Fish Spawning Aggregations Biology Research and Management written by Yvonne Sadovy de Mitcheson and published by Springer Science & Business Media. This book was released on 2011-12-10 with total page 639 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Reef fish spawning aggregations, ranging from small groups to many tens of thousands of individuals, are spectacular but poorly known natural phenomena whereby fish assemble at specific times and locations to spawn. For some species these large groups may be the only form of reproduction, the high fish numbers briefly giving a false impression of stability and abundance—an ‘illusion of plenty’. They are often a focus for intensive seasonal fishing because of their predictability and because many important commercial fishes form them. Highly vulnerable to overexploitation, many aggregations and their associated fisheries, have disappeared or are in decline. Few are effectively managed or incorporated into protected areas. Aggregations are not well understood by fishery scientists, managers and conservationists and their significance little appreciated by fishers or the wider public. To ensure their persistence to replenish important fisheries in coral ecosystems, maintain their ecosystem function and continue to delight divers, a significant change in perspective is needed to foster protection and management. This book provides comprehensive and practical coverage of the biology, study and management of reef fish aggregations, exploring their how, when, where, and why. It explores ways to better protect, study, manage and conserve them, while identifying key data gaps and questions. The text is extensively illustrated with many unique, never before published, photographs and graphics. Case studies on over 20 interesting and important fishes are included, outlining their biology and fisheries and highlighting major concerns and challenges.

Book Population Dynamics of Coral reef Fishes

Download or read book Population Dynamics of Coral reef Fishes written by Karen L. Overholtzer-McLeod and published by . This book was released on 2003 with total page 222 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Understanding the dynamics of open marine populations is difficult. Ecological processes may vary with the spatial structure of the habitat, and this variation may subsequently affect demographic rates. In a series of observational and experimental studies in the Bahamas, I examined the roles of emigration, mortality, and predation in the local population dynamics of juvenile coral-reef fishes. First, I documented mortality and emigration rates in populations of bluehead and yellowhead wrasse. Assuming that all losses were due solely to mortality would have significantly underestimated survivorship for both species on patch reefs, and for yellowheads on continuous reefs. Mortality differed between species, but emigration did not differ between species or reef types. Mortality of blueheads was density-dependent with respect to both conspecific density and total wrasse density on continuous reefs. In contrast, mortality of yellowheads varied inversely with the density of blueheads on patch reefs. Emigration rates varied inversely with distance to the nearest reef inhabited by conspecifics. In subsequent experiments, I manipulated densities of yellowhead wrasse and beaugregory damselfish, and determined that the relationship between density and mortality varied with reef spatial structure. On natural reefs, mortality rates of the wrasse were highly variable among reefs. On artificial reefs, mortality rates of both species were density-dependent on spatially isolated reefs, yet high and density-independent on aggregated reefs. Heterogeneity in the spatial structure of natural reefs likely caused variation in predation risk that resulted in high variability in mortality rates compared to artificial reefs. A final experiment demonstrated that a single resident predator caused substantial mortality of the damselfish, regardless of reef spacing. Patterns suggested that resident predators caused density-dependent mortality in their prey through a type 3 functional response on all reefs, but on aggregated reefs this density dependence was overwhelmed by high, density-independent mortality caused by transient predators. These results (1) suggest post-settlement movement should be better documented in reef-fish experiments, (2) demonstrate that the role of early post-settlement processes, such as predation, can be modified by the spatial structure of the habitat, and (3) have ramifications for the implementation of marine reserves.

Book The Larvae of Indo Pacific Coral Reef Fishes

Download or read book The Larvae of Indo Pacific Coral Reef Fishes written by Jeffrey M. Leis and published by UNSW Press. This book was released on 1984 with total page 288 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Behaviour of Settling Coral Reef Fishes and Supplementary Management Tools

Download or read book Behaviour of Settling Coral Reef Fishes and Supplementary Management Tools written by Adel Heenan and published by . This book was released on 2010 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Coral reef fish larvae take an active role in selecting their settlement site and sensory cues may help them to orientate during this process. As settlement is a period of transition through which the majority of individuals do not survive, it is often a focal point for the management of coral reef populations, which are of high conservation concern. In this thesis, I used choice tests and in situ techniques to assess the response of settlement-stage larvae to a range of odour, light and acoustic cues and I found that larvae are more selective in their response to sensory stimuli than previously thought. Micro-habitat odours are not likely to be used during settlement orientation, and odour cues may be used to avoid inappropriate settlement sites. The photopositive behaviour of larval fish is likely to match their spectral sensitivity but this proved difficult to assess in situ because of the high amount of spatial and temporal variation in larval distribution. The positive response of settlement-stage fish to played back reef noise is location specific as well as being highly specific to the reef sound recording. To understand whether it might be the composition of reef sound that drives the selective response of larvae to acoustic cues, I took sound recordings while collecting visual data on fish diversity and the behavioural activity of a sound producing, or soniferous, fish species. I found that the variation in intensity of reef noise matches the activity patterns of a soniferous species, and when reef noise is most intense is when visual estimates on the diversity of the reef fish assemblage are decreased. This information provides the basis for understanding how changes in the reef soundscape may effect larval recruitment and has exciting implications for using sound recordings as a method to monitor coral reefs. Finally, I tested the viability of releasing reared larvae to boost depleted populations and found that collecting and holding settlement-stage fish for a week can increase survival, relative to natural settlement. These data demonstrate that applying our knowledge of the settlement behaviour of coral reef fish will make a significant contribution to developing tools for management.

Book Population Ecology of a Coral Reef Fish Across Multiple Spatial Scales

Download or read book Population Ecology of a Coral Reef Fish Across Multiple Spatial Scales written by J. Wilson White and published by ProQuest. This book was released on 2007 with total page 332 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: A major goal in ecology is to understand how processes observed on single habitat patches "scale up" to predict population- or metapopulation-scale dynamics. This issue is especially critical for marine species with widely-dispersing, planktonic larvae. I addressed this question by investigating the behavior, growth, and mortality of juvenile bluehead wrasse, bifasciatum, a small planktivore, on reefs around the Caribbean island of St. Croix. At a small spatial scale (centimeters), bluehead wrasse enjoyed safety-in-numbers: per-capita mortality was substantially lower in larger groups. This effect did not scale up, however, and mortality was density-dependent at the spatial scale of entire reefs (Chapter 1). The relative safety of groups may explain why settlers occurred in groups more often than expected by chance, but group sizes may be limited by competition for prey. Grouped fish spent more time foraging than solitary fish, but dietary and otolith analyses revealed that grouped fish obtained the same number of prey and grow slower than solitary fish despite foraging more. Behavior and growth were also affected by the local abundance of copepod prey, which varied consistently across reefs (Chapter 2). Of even greater interest is spatial variation in the recruitment and abundance of a major wrasse predator, which closely followed the spatial pattern of bluehead wrasse recruitment. Presumably this occurred because larvae of both species are affected by the same oceanographic forces. This spatial correlation in recruitment is noteworthy because predator density strongly affected the form and intensity of density-dependent mortality among recently settled wrasse (Chapter 3). Since the majority of marine metapopulation models assume that density dependence is spatially homogenous, models incorporating spatially correlated settlement of predators and their prey produce strikingly different results. Populations with consistently low larval settlement experience much weaker density-dependence and are consequently far more important to the persistence of the metapopulation than high-settlement, high-predation populations (Chapter 4). Far from supporting the idea that small-scale processes scale up, I have identified several new potential sources of large-scale, oceanographically-driven variability that may affect the fate of individual fish and entire metapopulations.

Book Aquatic Sciences and Fisheries Abstracts

Download or read book Aquatic Sciences and Fisheries Abstracts written by and published by . This book was released on 1993 with total page 1246 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Coral reef Fishes

Download or read book Coral reef Fishes written by Timothy J. Pusack and published by . This book was released on 2013 with total page 166 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Because many coral-reef fishes are observable in situ, are amenable to transplantation, have small home ranges and short generation times, they provide a excellent system to investigate many topics within general ecology, fisheries biology, and conservation biology. The primary goal of this dissertation was to use the coral-reef fishes system to investigate two pressing sets of issues that face marine ecologists and managers of living marine resources. The first topic is the spatial and temporal patterns of larval dispersal and reproductive success in a marine metapopulation (Chapter 2). Because miniscule larvae are difficult to track in the vast pelagic environment, little is known about the patterns of larval dispersal. Yet, the more that is understood about the spatial and temporal variability in larval dispersal, the easier it will be to identify sites that are self-sustaining and exporting larvae to unprotect sites, a common goal of marine reserves. Incorporating this information into siting of marine reserves will improve their effectiveness. The second topic is fundamental in the ecology of biological invasions: species specific interactions between an invasive predator and native species. Specifically, I investigated the ability of an invasive predator to disrupt natural population regulation of a native prey species (Chapter 3), and the ability of a native predator to provide biotic resistance against the invasive species (Chapter 4). Because management of the lionfish invasion is needed throughout the Caribbean and Atlantic waters, it is necessary to understand not only how lionfish can change the native system, but also potential ways to moderate the negative effects. To address the first topic, we collected a total of 3,278 genetic tissue samples from bicolor damselfish (Stegastes partitus) over a four year period from reefs near four islands that encompass Exuma Sound, Bahamas (Chapter 2). Using a Bayesian parentage analysis, eight parent-offspring pairs were detected, which directly documented both connectivity between and self-recruitment on an ecological time scale. Remarkably, some larvae returned to the exact same reef where they were spawned, while others traveled to sites greater than 100 km distance. The only study island without a detected parent-offspring pair, Lee Stocking Island, was also the island that showed the most restrictive gene flow on evolutionary time scales. Additionally, variability was documented in the spatial and temporal signatures of sweepstakes reproduction and Wahlund effects. The variation we observed may be influenced by seasonal mesoscale gyres present in Exuma Sound, which play a prominent role in shaping local oceanographic patterns. Understanding how to identify pathways of larval dispersal is important to designing networks of marine reserves, because a common goal of reserves is to protect populations that are self-seeding and can export larvae. Thus, this research not only demonstrates that temporal variability is a prominent characteristic of larval dispersal, but provides an example of how to identify these populations. To address the second topic, two studies using both lab observations and manipulative field experiments were conducted to study the interaction between invasive Indo-Pacific red lionfish (Pterois volitans) and two different native species. In the first study (Chapter 3) three different data sets were used to document the effect of lionfish predation on their top prey species, the bridled goby (Coryphopterus glaucofraenum). The first data set was extracted from three previous studies to compare the change in abundance of bridled goby between patch reefs with lionfish and patch reefs that were predator-free. The second data set came from laboratory feeding trials to test for the presence of a size refuge for bridled goby caused by lionfish gape limitation. The third data set came from a manipulative field experiment using 22 nearshore reefs where the per capita mortality of bridled gobies was compared among four orthogonal predator treatments: (1) predator-free control, (2) a single native predator only -- the graysby grouper (Cephalopholis cruentatus) -- representing the pre-invasion system, (3) a single lionfish only, and (4) one native grouper and one lionfish, representing the invaded system. The combined results from these three data sets demonstrated that lionfish can consistently consume a significant amount and an extremely high proportion of bridled goby on small patch reefs. While small lionfish cannot eat bridled goby larger than 0.42 times their body size, large lionfish eat virtually the entire size range of bridled goby. These findings indicate that lionfish have the potential to extirpate local goby populations. In the second experiment, lionfish were exposed to different abundances of a native grouper, the Nassau grouper (Epinephelus striatus), on 28 nearshore patch reefs in the Bahamas. Lionfish persistence and growth was monitored over 10 weeks, as well as the abundance of small,

Book Spatial Ecology of Reef Fish in Backreef and Coral Reef Habitats

Download or read book Spatial Ecology of Reef Fish in Backreef and Coral Reef Habitats written by and published by . This book was released on 2004 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Understanding the spatial population dynamics of organisms is essential for effective ecological conservation and management. Landscape ecological theories consider the habitat composition and structure of landscapes at multiple spatial scales as drivers for population and community patterns. Yet, many of these theories have evolved through study of terrestrial systems, and a formal, predictive marine spatial ecology is needed to account for the unique characteristics of marine species and their environments. Marine systems present several conceptual challenges to established spatial ecological theories, because (1) pelagic larval dispersal strategies and life-histories incorporating ontogenetic habitat shifts make it difficult to identify population boundaries, (2) the decoupling of adult, larval, and juvenile populations means that a population's demographic rates are not associated with a single habitat patch, but rather a heterogeneous mosaic of habitats, and (3) hydrodynamic processes complicate predictions of landscape connectivity. My research contributes to the development of marine spatial ecology by addressing the effects of local habitat patch characteristics, regional landscape structure, and hydrodynamics upon dispersal and recruitment of marine populations at multiple spatial scales. My focus was on the important shallow, coastal ecosystems that often serve as nursery habitat for many fish and crustacean species, and where habitat and hydrodynamics are likely to both play important roles in organism dispersal and survival. My research included three related studies: (1) a computer simulation model of passive and active dispersal strategies evaluated how organism dispersal behavior and landscape structure interacted to influence dispersal and recruitment success; (2) a regression analyses tested the efficacy of both traditional (e.g. patch area, habitat diversity) and marine-specific (e.g. proximity to hydrodynamic corridors, habitat volume) landscape c.

Book Oceanic Abstracts

Download or read book Oceanic Abstracts written by and published by . This book was released on 1996-10 with total page 1002 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book The Larvae of Indo Pacific Coral Reef Fishes

Download or read book The Larvae of Indo Pacific Coral Reef Fishes written by Jeffrey Martin Leis and published by . This book was released on 1982 with total page 269 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: