Mixed-species groups of herbivorous reef fishes show variable responses to ecosystem perturbations in the Lakshadweep Islands, India

Author:

Theo Anne Heloise1ORCID,Shanker Kartik12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Ecological Sciences, Indian Institute of Science, C.V. Raman Avenue, Bangalore 560012, India

2. Dakshin Foundation, No. 2203, 8th Main, D Block, MCECHS Layout, Sahakara Nagar, Bengaluru 560092, India

Abstract

Herbivorous reef fishes provide a vital function in reef ecosystems by removing algae and making space available to coral recruits. The high abundance of herbivores in the reefs of the Lakshadweep islands has potentially aided in reef recovery and helped avoid a phase shift to an algal-dominated system, despite most areas having suffered massive coral losses. Mixed-species grouping in herbivores could potentially benefit both the participant species and the reef ecosystem by improving foraging efficiency. We examined the grouping propensity and species richness for three types of herbivore groups after a mass-bleaching event in 2010 and a mass recruitment event in 2015. The species richness and number of parrotfish groups, as well as the grouping propensity of common species, declined starkly across years, indicating that these groups may have formed in response to the mass-bleaching event, slowly diminishing as the reefs recovered. Conversely, large surgeonfish, which varied in richness and propensity across islands and aspect, are probably influenced by local processes. Small surgeonfish only increased in species richness and number in 2015, which may have been in response to the recruitment event. Thus, herbivorous fishes may respond differently to local ecosystem perturbations and play different roles in reef recovery. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Mixed-species groups and aggregations: shaping ecological and behavioural patterns and processes’.

Funder

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

Idea Wild

PADI Foundation

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

Reference54 articles.

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2. Lukoschek V McCormick MI. 2000 A review of multi-species foraging associations in fishes and their ecological significance. In Proc. 9th Int. Coral Reef Symp.: World Coral Reefs in the New Millenium 23-27 October 2000 Bali Indonesia pp. 467-474.

3. Mixed Schooling and Its Possible Significance in a Tropical Western Atlantic Parrotfish and Surgeonfish

4. Foraging ecology of herbivorous reef fishes in mixed-species groups;Wolf NG;Am. Zool.,1983

5. Schooling tendency and foraging benefit in the ocean surgeonfish;Wolf NG;Environ. Biol. Fish.,1987

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1. Mixed-species groups and aggregations: shaping ecological and behavioural patterns and processes;Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences;2023-04-17

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