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Linking variation in planktonic primary production to coral reef fish growth and condition

Authors :
Ronan C. Roche
Adel Heenan
Brett M. Taylor
Jill N. Schwarz
Michael D. Fox
Lucy K. Southworth
Gareth J. Williams
John R. Turner
Source :
Royal Society Open Science. 9
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
The Royal Society, 2022.

Abstract

Within low-nutrient tropical oceans, islands and atolls with higher primary production support higher fish biomass and reef organism abundance. External energy subsidies can be delivered onto reefs via a range of physical mechanisms. However, the influence of spatial variation in primary production on reef fish growth and condition is largely unknown. It is not yet clear how energy subsidies interact with reef depth and slope. Here we test the hypothesis that with increased proximity to deep-water oceanic nutrient sources, or at sites with shallower reef slopes, parameters of fish growth and condition will be higher. Contrary to expectations, we found no association between fish growth rate and sites with higher mean chlorophyll-a values. There were no differences in fish δ 15 N or δ 13 C values between depths. The relationship between fish condition and primary production was influenced by depth, driven by increased fish condition at shallow depths within a primary production ‘hotspot’ site. Carbon δ 13 C was depleted with increasing primary production, and interacted with reef slope. Our results indicate that variable primary production did not influence growth rates in planktivorous Chromis fieldi within 10–17.5 m depth, but show site-specific variation in reef physical characteristics influencing fish carbon isotopic composition.

Subjects

Subjects :
Multidisciplinary

Details

ISSN :
20545703
Volume :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Royal Society Open Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e95704fb2d24b8fb4687880088c16d08