High rates of herbivory in remote northwest Australian seagrass meadows by rabbitfish and green turtles

Author:

Vanderklift MA1,Pillans RD2,Hutton M1,De Wever L1,Kendrick GA3,Zavala-Perez A3,Vergés A4,Garthwin R4,Oades D5,McCarthy P5,George K5,Sampi T5,George D5,Sampi C5,Edgar Z5,Dougal K5,Howard A5

Affiliation:

1. CSIRO Oceans & Atmosphere, Indian Ocean Marine Research Centre, Crawley, 6009 Western Australia, Australia

2. CSIRO Oceans & Atmosphere, Queensland Biosciences Precinct, St. Lucia, 4067 Queensland, Australia

3. School of Biological Sciences and Oceans Institute, The University of Western Australia, Crawley, 6009 Western Australia, Australia

4. School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of New South Wales, Sydney, 2052 New South Wales, Australia

5. Bardi Jawi Rangers, One Arm Point, 6725 Western Australia, Australia

Abstract

Herbivory is a key ecological process that often determines the composition and abundance of plants. Estimates of herbivory in seagrass meadows are typically lower than those in other vegetated coastal ecosystems, but herbivory can be intense when large herbivorous vertebrates are abundant. We surveyed rates of herbivory on 2 species of tropical seagrasses (Thalassia hemprichii and Enhalus acoroides), the abundance of herbivorous vertebrates, and the diet of 2 abundant herbivorous vertebrates (the green turtle Chelonia mydas and the rabbitfish Siganus lineatus) in lagoons adjacent to remote islands off northwestern Australia. Rates of herbivory in some deployments of tethered seagrass were more than 1000 times higher than rates of production and were among the highest recorded. Consumption exceeded production in half the deployments (9 of 18). Remote underwater video revealed that S. lineatus was the most abundant herbivore. Stomachs of S. lineatus contained mostly seagrass, and models based on stable isotopes indicated that seagrass was the primary source of nutrition. Stomach contents of C. mydas were more variable, containing seagrass and macroalgae (although the sample size was low), but models based on stable isotopes indicated that seagrass was likely the primary source of nutrition. Multiple lines of evidence suggest that the high rates of herbivory on the seagrasses T. hemprichii and E. acoroides are mainly due to direct consumption by the abundant S. lineatus, and perhaps also C. mydas. Seagrass is the primary contributor to the nutrition of both species.

Publisher

Inter-Research Science Center

Subject

Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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