Retention of habitat complexity minimizes disassembly of reef fish communities following disturbance: a large-scale natural experiment.

High biodiversity ecosystems are commonly associated with complex habitats. Coral reefs are highly diverse ecosystems, but are under increasing pressure from numerous stressors, many of which reduce live coral cover and habitat complexity with concomitant effects on other organisms such as reef fish...

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Main Authors: Michael J Emslie, Alistair J Cheal, Kerryn A Johns
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4139330?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-fe275a81b65e4c5cae9462159ed9a74c2020-11-24T21:51:48ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0198e10538410.1371/journal.pone.0105384Retention of habitat complexity minimizes disassembly of reef fish communities following disturbance: a large-scale natural experiment.Michael J EmslieAlistair J ChealKerryn A JohnsHigh biodiversity ecosystems are commonly associated with complex habitats. Coral reefs are highly diverse ecosystems, but are under increasing pressure from numerous stressors, many of which reduce live coral cover and habitat complexity with concomitant effects on other organisms such as reef fishes. While previous studies have highlighted the importance of habitat complexity in structuring reef fish communities, they employed gradient or meta-analyses which lacked a controlled experimental design over broad spatial scales to explicitly separate the influence of live coral cover from overall habitat complexity. Here a natural experiment using a long term (20 year), spatially extensive (∼ 115,000 kms(2)) dataset from the Great Barrier Reef revealed the fundamental importance of overall habitat complexity for reef fishes. Reductions of both live coral cover and habitat complexity had substantial impacts on fish communities compared to relatively minor impacts after major reductions in coral cover but not habitat complexity. Where habitat complexity was substantially reduced, species abundances broadly declined and a far greater number of fish species were locally extirpated, including economically important fishes. This resulted in decreased species richness and a loss of diversity within functional groups. Our results suggest that the retention of habitat complexity following disturbances can ameliorate the impacts of coral declines on reef fishes, so preserving their capacity to perform important functional roles essential to reef resilience. These results add to a growing body of evidence about the importance of habitat complexity for reef fishes, and represent the first large-scale examination of this question on the Great Barrier Reef.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4139330?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael J Emslie
Alistair J Cheal
Kerryn A Johns
spellingShingle Michael J Emslie
Alistair J Cheal
Kerryn A Johns
Retention of habitat complexity minimizes disassembly of reef fish communities following disturbance: a large-scale natural experiment.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Michael J Emslie
Alistair J Cheal
Kerryn A Johns
author_sort Michael J Emslie
title Retention of habitat complexity minimizes disassembly of reef fish communities following disturbance: a large-scale natural experiment.
title_short Retention of habitat complexity minimizes disassembly of reef fish communities following disturbance: a large-scale natural experiment.
title_full Retention of habitat complexity minimizes disassembly of reef fish communities following disturbance: a large-scale natural experiment.
title_fullStr Retention of habitat complexity minimizes disassembly of reef fish communities following disturbance: a large-scale natural experiment.
title_full_unstemmed Retention of habitat complexity minimizes disassembly of reef fish communities following disturbance: a large-scale natural experiment.
title_sort retention of habitat complexity minimizes disassembly of reef fish communities following disturbance: a large-scale natural experiment.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description High biodiversity ecosystems are commonly associated with complex habitats. Coral reefs are highly diverse ecosystems, but are under increasing pressure from numerous stressors, many of which reduce live coral cover and habitat complexity with concomitant effects on other organisms such as reef fishes. While previous studies have highlighted the importance of habitat complexity in structuring reef fish communities, they employed gradient or meta-analyses which lacked a controlled experimental design over broad spatial scales to explicitly separate the influence of live coral cover from overall habitat complexity. Here a natural experiment using a long term (20 year), spatially extensive (∼ 115,000 kms(2)) dataset from the Great Barrier Reef revealed the fundamental importance of overall habitat complexity for reef fishes. Reductions of both live coral cover and habitat complexity had substantial impacts on fish communities compared to relatively minor impacts after major reductions in coral cover but not habitat complexity. Where habitat complexity was substantially reduced, species abundances broadly declined and a far greater number of fish species were locally extirpated, including economically important fishes. This resulted in decreased species richness and a loss of diversity within functional groups. Our results suggest that the retention of habitat complexity following disturbances can ameliorate the impacts of coral declines on reef fishes, so preserving their capacity to perform important functional roles essential to reef resilience. These results add to a growing body of evidence about the importance of habitat complexity for reef fishes, and represent the first large-scale examination of this question on the Great Barrier Reef.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4139330?pdf=render
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AT kerrynajohns retentionofhabitatcomplexityminimizesdisassemblyofreeffishcommunitiesfollowingdisturbancealargescalenaturalexperiment
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