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Journal ArticleDOI

Movements of Fishes Within and Among Fringing Coral Reefs in Barbados

Matthew R. Chapman, +1 more
- 01 Jan 2000 - 
- Vol. 57, Iss: 1, pp 11-24
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TLDR
In this paper, the authors used trap data collected from Antillean fish traps in the Barbados Marine Reserve and adjacent non-reserve over a two-month period to study the movement of coral reef fishes across marine reserve boundaries.
Abstract
Movement of coral reef fishes across marine reserve boundaries subsequent to their initial settlement from the plankton will affect the ability of no-take reserves to conserve stocks and to benefit adjacent fisheries. However, the mobility of most exploited reef species is poorly known. We tagged 1443 individuals of 35 reef fish species captured in Antillean fish traps in the Barbados Marine Reserve and adjacent non-reserve over a two-month period. Trapping and visual surveys were used to monitor the movements of these fish during the trapping period and the subsequent two months. Estimates of distances moved were corrected for the spatial distribution of sampling effort and for the number of recaptures of individual fish. Recapture rates for individual species ranged from 0–100% (median=38%). Species mobility estimated by recapture and resighting were highly correlated. Most species were strongly site attached, with the majority of recaptures and resightings occurring at the site of tagging. However, only one of 59 tagged jacks (Caranx latus, C. ruber) was ever resighted, suggesting emigration from the study area. All species were occasionally recorded away from the sites where they had been tagged (20–500 m), and several species, including surgeonfish, Acanthurus bahianus, A. coeruleus, filefish, Cantherhines pullus, butterflyfish, Chaetodon striatus, angelfish Holocanthus tricolor and parrotfish, Sparisoma viride, ranged widely within reefs. In contrast, few movements were observed between reefs separated by more than 20 m of sand and rubble, and no emigration from the Reserve was recorded. Most reef fishes vulnerable to Antillean traps appear sufficiently site-attached to benefit from reserves. However, many species move over a wide enough area to take them out of small reserves on continuous reef. Use of natural home range boundaries could minimize exposure of fishes in reserves to mortality from adjacent fisheries.

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Effects of climate -induced coral bleaching on coral -reef fishes — ecological and economic consequences

TL;DR: Urgent action on the fundamental causes of climate change and appropriate management of critical elements of habitat structure (coral cover and topographic complexity) are key to ensuring long-term persistence of coral-reef fishes.
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MARINE RESERVES AND OCEAN NEIGHBORHOODS: The Spatial Scale of Marine Populations and Their Management

TL;DR: In this article, the authors review four fields of marine biology that each differentially illuminate the scale of marine neighborhoods: effects of marine reserves, tagging studies, microchemistry, and population genetics.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Predation, Prey Refuges, and the Structure of Coral-Reef Fish Assemblages

TL;DR: A significant negative relationship among reefs between predator abundance and maximum prey-species richness is observed and a conceptual model where the local abundances of coral-reef fishes are determined by the relative magnitudes of recruitment by larvae, colonization by juveniles and adults, predation, and competition for refuges is proposed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Implications of fish home range size and relocation for marine reserve function

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the implications of how fish use space, in particular the occurrence and size of home ranges and the frequency and direction of home range relocations, and concluded that species with low mobility and weak density-dependence of space use will show the greatest increase in reserves and the strongest benefit for population reproductive capacity.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Effects of Edge Permeability and Habitat Geometry on Emigration from Patches of Habitat

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated two factors that may affect emigration from insular patches of habitat, where emigration is the proportion of dispersing individuals that leave the habitat patch.
Journal ArticleDOI

Synergistic predation, density dependence, and population regulation in marine fish

TL;DR: Field experiments on a model system of coral reef fishes showed that small juveniles of Chromis cyanea suffer heavy mortality that is spatially density-dependent only in the presence of two suites of predators: transient piscivores attacking from above, and reef-resident pisciva attacking from below.
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