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Early life history and settlement of the slender filefish, <Emphasis Type="Italic">Monacanthus tuckeri</Emphasis> (Monacanthidae), at Calabash Caye,Turneffe Atoll,Belize
Authors:Jessica?Ben-David  Email author" target="_blank">Jacob?P?KritzerEmail author
Institution:(1) Department of Biology, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, N6A 5B7, Canada;(2) Environmental Defense, 257 Park Avenue South, New York, NY, 10010, U.S.A
Abstract:Synopsis We examined early life history traits and patterns of settlement of the slender filefish, Monacanthus tuckeri, at Calabash Caye, Turneffe Atoll, Belize. A settlement peak was evident at the new moon, and no settlement occurred at the full moon. However, settlement rates at the quarter moons could not be estimated due to sampling gaps. Many reef fishes show new moon settlement peaks, so M. tuckeri shares some characteristics with the primarily perciform species on coral reefs. Pelagic larval duration was long (mean = 42 days) and variable, suggesting that dispersal patterns might be diverse. Size at settlement was large (mean = 32 mm total length) and also variable. Larval duration and size at settlement were outside of the average values exhibited by reef fishes, but are not beyond the extreme end of the range, and might be explained by association with pelagic debris prior to settlement. There were no differences in overall settlement rates on reef and seagrass habitats, and fish settling to either habitat did not differ in larval duration, size at settlement, or larval growth rate. This suggests that settlement to alternative habitats may be random, or driven by availability of suitable microhabitat, rather than habitat quality or individual traits.
Keywords:recruitment  pelagic larval duration  cryptic  seagrass  coral reef
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