Herbivore space use influences coral reef recovery

Herbivores play an important role in marine communities. On coral reefs, the diversity and unique feeding behaviours found within this functional group can have a comparably diverse set of impacts in structuring the benthic community. Here, using a spatially explicit model of herbivore foraging, we...

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Main Authors: Yoan Eynaud, Dylan E. McNamara, Stuart A. Sandin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2016-01-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.160262
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spelling doaj-e5881e882cbf44afb3094f73972d83ef2020-11-25T04:07:54ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032016-01-013610.1098/rsos.160262160262Herbivore space use influences coral reef recoveryYoan EynaudDylan E. McNamaraStuart A. SandinHerbivores play an important role in marine communities. On coral reefs, the diversity and unique feeding behaviours found within this functional group can have a comparably diverse set of impacts in structuring the benthic community. Here, using a spatially explicit model of herbivore foraging, we explore how the spatial pattern of grazing behaviours impacts the recovery of a reef ecosystem, considering movements at two temporal scales—short term (e.g. daily foraging patterns) and longer term (e.g. monthly movements across the landscape). Model simulations suggest that more spatially constrained herbivores are more effective at conferring recovery capability by providing a favourable environment to coral recruitment and growth. Results also show that the composition of food available to the herbivore community is linked directly to the pattern of space use by herbivores. To date, most studies of variability among the impacts of herbivore species have considered the diversity of feeding modes and mouthparts. Our work provides a complementary view of spatial patterns of foraging, revealing that variation in movement behaviours alone can affect patterns of benthic change, and thus broadens our view of realized links between herbivore diversity and reef recovery.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.160262herbivorebenthic communitiesrecoverybehaviourspace usemodelling
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yoan Eynaud
Dylan E. McNamara
Stuart A. Sandin
spellingShingle Yoan Eynaud
Dylan E. McNamara
Stuart A. Sandin
Herbivore space use influences coral reef recovery
Royal Society Open Science
herbivore
benthic communities
recovery
behaviour
space use
modelling
author_facet Yoan Eynaud
Dylan E. McNamara
Stuart A. Sandin
author_sort Yoan Eynaud
title Herbivore space use influences coral reef recovery
title_short Herbivore space use influences coral reef recovery
title_full Herbivore space use influences coral reef recovery
title_fullStr Herbivore space use influences coral reef recovery
title_full_unstemmed Herbivore space use influences coral reef recovery
title_sort herbivore space use influences coral reef recovery
publisher The Royal Society
series Royal Society Open Science
issn 2054-5703
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Herbivores play an important role in marine communities. On coral reefs, the diversity and unique feeding behaviours found within this functional group can have a comparably diverse set of impacts in structuring the benthic community. Here, using a spatially explicit model of herbivore foraging, we explore how the spatial pattern of grazing behaviours impacts the recovery of a reef ecosystem, considering movements at two temporal scales—short term (e.g. daily foraging patterns) and longer term (e.g. monthly movements across the landscape). Model simulations suggest that more spatially constrained herbivores are more effective at conferring recovery capability by providing a favourable environment to coral recruitment and growth. Results also show that the composition of food available to the herbivore community is linked directly to the pattern of space use by herbivores. To date, most studies of variability among the impacts of herbivore species have considered the diversity of feeding modes and mouthparts. Our work provides a complementary view of spatial patterns of foraging, revealing that variation in movement behaviours alone can affect patterns of benthic change, and thus broadens our view of realized links between herbivore diversity and reef recovery.
topic herbivore
benthic communities
recovery
behaviour
space use
modelling
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.160262
work_keys_str_mv AT yoaneynaud herbivorespaceuseinfluencescoralreefrecovery
AT dylanemcnamara herbivorespaceuseinfluencescoralreefrecovery
AT stuartasandin herbivorespaceuseinfluencescoralreefrecovery
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