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Reef flattening effects on total richness and species responses in the C aribbean
Author(s) -
Newman Steven P.,
Meesters Erik H.,
Dryden Charlie S.,
Williams Stacey M.,
Sanchez Cristina,
Mumby Peter J.,
Polunin Nicholas V. C.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of animal ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.134
H-Index - 157
eISSN - 1365-2656
pISSN - 0021-8790
DOI - 10.1111/1365-2656.12429
Subject(s) - species richness , reef , ecology , biology , coral reef , coral reef fish , coral , structural complexity , habitat , taxon
Summary There has been ongoing flattening of C aribbean coral reefs with the loss of habitat having severe implications for these systems. Complexity and its structural components are important to fish species richness and community composition, but little is known about its role for other taxa or species‐specific responses. This study reveals the importance of reef habitat complexity and structural components to different taxa of macrofauna, total species richness, and individual coral and fish species in the C aribbean. Species presence and richness of different taxa were visually quantified in one hundred 25‐m 2 plots in three marine reserves in the C aribbean. Sampling was evenly distributed across five levels of visually estimated reef complexity, with five structural components also recorded: the number of corals, number of large corals, slope angle, maximum sponge and maximum octocoral height. Taking advantage of natural heterogeneity in structural complexity within a particular coral reef habitat ( Orbicella reefs) and discrete environmental envelope, thus minimizing other sources of variability, the relative importance of reef complexity and structural components was quantified for different taxa and individual fish and coral species on Caribbean coral reefs using boosted regression trees ( BRT s). Boosted regression tree models performed very well when explaining variability in total (82·3%), coral (80·6%) and fish species richness (77·3%), for which the greatest declines in richness occurred below intermediate reef complexity levels. Complexity accounted for very little of the variability in octocorals, sponges, arthropods, annelids or anemones. BRT s revealed species‐specific variability and importance for reef complexity and structural components. Coral and fish species occupancy generally declined at low complexity levels, with the exception of two coral species ( Pseudodiploria strigosa and Porites divaricata ) and four fish species ( Halichoeres bivittatus , H. maculipinna , Malacoctenus triangulatus and Stegastes partitus ) more common at lower reef complexity levels. A significant interaction between country and reef complexity revealed a non‐additive decline in species richness in areas of low complexity and the reserve in P uerto R ico. Flattening of Caribbean coral reefs will result in substantial species losses, with few winners. Individual structural components have considerable value to different species, and their loss may have profound impacts on population responses of coral and fish due to identity effects of key species, which underpin population richness and resilience and may affect essential ecosystem processes and services.