More coral may not equal more fish on our reefs

Publicly released:
Australia; QLD
Image by joakant from Pixabay
Image by joakant from Pixabay

Fish numbers on our reefs may not be as dependent on coral as we thought, according to Australian research. It is often assumed that there is a strong link between fish numbers and corals on our reefs but this new Australian research suggests that fish and coral might not be as closely linked as we thought. The researchers brought together the results of 66 studies and found that there was only a weak link between coral cover and fish richness, fish abundance or fish biomass. Even among fish species that often decline after coral loss, such as damselfishes and butterflyfishes, the researchers still didn't find a strong link. The researchers say this suggests that we need to look beyond the simple idea that more coral equals more fish and acknowledge the complex processes that structure and maintain coral reef communities.

Media release

From: James Cook University

Fish-coral relationships on the rocks?

A team of international and North Queensland researchers from James Cook University have found the link between fishes and corals may not be as strong as scientists had always assumed.

Lead author, JCU PhD candidate Pooventhran Muruga, examined more than 4600 reports on the relationship between fishes and corals.

“Undeniably, coral reefs serve as a key habitat for reef fishes, providing both shelter and food. It is therefore no surprise that for more than four decades there has been a widespread consensus that reef fishes are associated with reef-building corals,” Mr Muruga said.

“But on closer inspection of the literature, we found a large variability within and across fishes and locations and globally there were only weak associations between fishes and corals.’’

Co-author, Professor David Bellwood said the findings questioned assumptions regarding the strength and ubiquity of fish-coral associations.

‘‘I would caution against assuming a direct and omnipresent relationship between the two,’’ Professor Bellwood said.

Co-author Dr Alexandre Siqueira noted the apparent weakness of fish-coral associations, combined with the stability of some fish populations amidst catastrophic coral loss, underscored the need to acknowledge that coral cover alone may not influence fishes as strongly as we thought.

Mr Muruga said rather than a critical interdependence, fishes and corals may be two co-occurring entities within a much more complex ecosystem.

‘‘The findings don’t downplay the importance of corals on reef but suggest there is more to the relationship,’’ Mr Muruga said.

“It emphasises the need to look beyond the simple paradigm of more coral equals more fish and acknowledge the complex processes that structure and maintain coral reef communities,” Mr Murga said.

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Research Springer Nature, Web page Please link to the article in online versions of your report (the URL will go live after the embargo ends).
Journal/
conference:
Nature Ecology & Evolution
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: James Cook University
Funder: Funding was provided by the Australian Research Council (Laureate grant LF190100062 to D.R.B.), with a postdoctoral fellowship to A.C.S. and a PhD scholarship to P.M.
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