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Caging experiment to examine mortality during metamorphosis of coral reef fish larvae
Authors:S Planes  G Lecaillon
Institution:Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes – ESA CNRS 8046, Université de Perpignan, 66860 Perpignan Cedex, France,
Centre de Recherches Insulaires et Observatoire de l'Environnement, BP 1013, Papetoai, Moorea, French Polynesia,
Abstract:All previous attempts to estimate early postsettlement mortality of coral reef fishes using either caging experiments or disappearance of new recruits have examined fish that had already settled, and therefore did not include the metamorphosis process. Crest nets capture unharmed transparent larvae during their migration from the open ocean to lagoon reefs before metamorphosis. We released these presettlement larvae at night into cages surrounding patch reefs and measured larval survivorship after two nights. This caging experiment involved cages enclosing the natural resident fish fauna, including predators, and others cleared of fish before releasing the larvae. The analyses of variance showed that (1) there was no difference in survivorship between the seven trials, (2) there was a significant difference between cleared and uncleared cages, and (3) there were significant differences between larval species tested. For the seven species that had a significant difference in survivorship between cleared and uncleared cages, average mortality of the larvae was 14% (range 0-26%) in cleared cages and 67% (range 29-76%) in cages with predators. The difference in mortality between species was related to the size of the larvae, as larger species exhibited reduced mortality compared to smaller species. Mortality was related to the abundance of resident fish that could act as predators or competitors. Predation can have a significant impact on the survival of metamorphosing fish larvae on coral reefs.
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