Title of article
Reef structure drives parrotfish species composition on shelf edge reefs in La Parguera, Puerto Rico
Author/Authors
Tzadik، نويسنده , , Orian E. and Appeldoorn، نويسنده , , Richard S.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages
10
From page
14
To page
23
Abstract
Shelf edge reefs that exist in coral reef ecosystems provide essential habitats for a large variety of fish and other marine organisms. Marine herbivores act as differential algal grazers that advocate coral reef colonization. In the Caribbean basin parrotfishes make up a large contingency of such herbivores and act as important ecological ichthyofauna. By investigating parrotfish relationship with habitat, this study aims to aid in future predictive mapping techniques that will outline parrotfish distributions via benthic quantification. Parrotfish communities were evaluated on the shelf edge reef off of La Parguera, Puerto Rico. Parrotfish abundances were found to positively correlate with high values of overall reef structure. High values of coral cover and of rugosity were strong indicators of most parrotfish species. The lone exception, Scarus taeniopterus, negatively correlated with these factors and positively correlated with algal cover. Indications exist that Scarus taeniopterus and Scarus iseri are sympatric species and can be found in abundance at opposite locations.
Keywords
Parrotfish , Scarus taeniopterus , structure , Habitat affiliation , Rugosity
Journal title
Continental Shelf Research
Serial Year
2013
Journal title
Continental Shelf Research
Record number
2297719
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