Abstract
A mark–release–resighting (MRR)
technique was used to estimate population size of the coral trout,
Plectropomus leopardus, on coral reefs fringing Lizard
Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia. Fish were captured by hook-and-line
fishing, and marked with individual freeze-brand numbers in August 1995. An
underwater visual census (UVC) technique was used during September and October
1995 both for resighting of marked fish and to make an independent estimate of
fish density and thus population size. The study area was 750 966
m2 . The UVC sampled 154 000 m2
(20.5%) of this area. Six different methods of analysis of MRR gave
similar population size estimates (e.g. Petersen 12 873; 95% CI
9989–15 754) extrapolated to the 4.5 million-m2
reef area from datum to 20-m depth around Lizard Island. UVC gave a population
size estimate (24 182; 95% CI 21 860–26 504) twice that of MRR.
The lower estimate derived from MRR may be the result of tag-induced
mortality, or of the relative difficulty in discriminating between marked and
unmarked trout by UVC. This is only the second estimate of population size of
coral trout on an area of the Great Barrier Reef.
Subject
Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography
Cited by
25 articles.
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