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SAFETY IN NUMBERS AND THE SPATIAL SCALING OF DENSITY‐DEPENDENT MORTALITY IN A CORAL REEF FISH
Author(s) -
White J. Wilson,
Warner Robert R.
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.144
H-Index - 294
eISSN - 1939-9170
pISSN - 0012-9658
DOI - 10.1890/06-1949.1
Subject(s) - coral reef fish , coral reef , fish <actinopterygii> , reef , fishery , ecology , geography , scaling , coral , coral reef organizations , environmental science , coral reef protection , biology , mathematics , geometry
In coral reef fishes, density‐dependent population regulation is commonly mediated via predation on juveniles that have recently settled from the plankton. All else being equal, strong density‐dependent mortality should select against the formation of high‐density aggregations, yet the juveniles of many reef fishes aggregate. In light of this apparent contradiction, we hypothesized that the form and intensity of density dependence vary with the spatial scale of measurement. Individual groups might enjoy safety in numbers, but predators could still produce density‐dependent mortality at larger spatial scales. We investigated this possibility using recently settled juvenile bluehead wrasse, Thalassoma bifasciatum , a small, aggregating reef fish. An initial caging experiment demonstrated that juvenile bluehead wrasse settlers suffer high predation, and spatial settlement patterns indicated that bluehead wrasse juveniles preferentially settle in groups, although they are also found singly. We then monitored the mortality of recently settled juveniles at two spatial scales: microsites, occupied by individual fish or groups of fish and separated by centimeters, and sites, consisting of ∼2400‐m 2 areas of reef and separated by kilometers. At the microsite scale, we measured group size and effective population density independently and found that per capita mortality decreased with group size but was not related to density. At the larger spatial scale, however, per capita mortality increased with settler density. This shift in the form of density dependence with spatial scale could reconcile the existence of small‐scale aggregative behavior typical of many reef fishes with the population‐scale density dependence that is essential to population stability and persistence.