Abstract
Recent studies have shown that recruitment variability is an important process structuring reef fish assemblages. The aim of this study is to describe the spatio-temporal patterns of recruitment of three abundant labroid taxa (Coris schroederi, Halichoeres melanurus and Scarus spp.), using damselfish territories as replicate units of habitat. Temporal recruitment patterns of each taxa were consistent among three sites along 2 km of reef tract, with small differences among sites probably the result of hydrological or random factors operating at that scale. Recruitment of only one species (C. schroederi) showed consistent differences in the magnitude of recruitment among sites, which was probably due to an overriding effect of habitat selection for the location of the territories on the reef profile at one site. Two taxa, C. schroederi and Scarus spp., recruited in low to moderate rates over many weeks with moderate recruitment peaks detected in one year only. This pattern may be characteristic of many labroid species that have protracted periods of production of larvae. In contrast, H. melanurus recruited in a single short pulse of high magnitude each summer, which suggests that production of larvae by this species may occur over a more restricted period of time. No strong pattern of lunar entrainment of recruitment was detected for any taxa, which may be due to a lack of lunar periodicity in production of larvae. Further studies are now required to identify the processes that are important in determining patterns of labroid recruitment.
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Green, A.L. Spatio-temporal patterns of recruitment of labroid fishes (Pisces: Labridae and Scaridae) to damselfish territories. Environmental Biology of Fishes 51, 235–244 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1007389206099
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1007389206099