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Habitat selection and territorial defense behaviors in juvenile cortez angelfish,Pomacanthus zonipectus (gill)
Authors:William Wallace Reynolds
Affiliation:(1) Department of Biology, The Pennsylvania State University, 18708 Wilkes-Barre, PA, USA
Abstract:Scuba diving observations in the Gulf of California (Mexico) on juvenile Cortez angelfishes, Pomacanthus zonipectus (Gill), indicate that these fish select and defend territories centered about a rock crevice. By day, they make brief feeding excursions, venturing even over open sandy areas near the rocks. They are substrate feeders, and will remove ectoparasites from other fishes, even attempting to lsquocleanrsquo human divers. At night they remain in their rock crevices. Laboratory experiments, conducted to quantify habitat-selection and territorial-defense behaviors in juvenile P. zonipectus, revealed that they spend 75% of their time during the day near rocks and 25% over sand in a divided experimental tank. The frequency of attacks on a mirror image increased as the mirror was moved closer to the rock crevice which was the territorial focus.
Keywords:Angelfish  Pomacanthus zonipectus  Pomacanthidae  habitat selection  territoriality  behavior  ethology  Gulf of California
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