Spatial and Temporal Patterns in Assemblages of Temperate Reef Fish |
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Authors: | HOLBROOK, SALLY J. KINGSFORD, MICHAEL J. SCHMITT, RUSSELL J. STEPHENS, JOHN S., JR. |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biological Sciences, University of California Santa Barbara, California 93106 School of Biological Sciences, University of Sydney Sydney, Australia Coastal Research Center, Marine Science Institute, University of California Santa Barbara, California 93106 Department of Biology, Occidental College Los Angeles, California 90041 |
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Abstract: | SYNOPSIS. For reef fish in temperate marine regions, such componentsof local assemblage diversity (i.e., within a reef) as speciesrichness, total fish density, and rank order of abundance canremain relatively constantthrough time. Long-term data (17 years)for assemblages on 2 reefs in Southern California revealed that,despite high turnover in rare species, overall species richnesswas affected only moderately by major oceanographicdisturbances.This resilience of the assemblage is in marked contrast to hightemporal variation in densities exhibited by many local populationsof individual species, and it suggests that measurements ofdiversity to indicate status of an assemblage should be usedwith caution. Here we consider various processes and factors,together with the spatial and temporal scales over which theyoperate, that can influence local diversity (and its estimation)of reef fishes. Mechanisms that can "buffer" local diversityof reef fishes include dispersal of young that inter-connectssubpopulations, high "inertia" in relative abundance and populationstructures (especially for long-lived species), and broad ecologicalrequirements of many species. These considerations suggest thatthe effect of disturbances on local diversity of reef fisheswill depend in part on the magnitude, duration, frequency andspatial scale of the perturbation. While long-term data arefew, available information suggests that, due to life historycharacteristics of the fish and the spatial and temporal scalesat which disturbances are likely to occur, assemblages of temperatemarine reef fish might be relatively resilient to environmentalperturbations |
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