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      Habitat Specialization in Tropical Continental Shelf Demersal Fish Assemblages

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          Abstract

          The implications of shallow water impacts such as fishing and climate change on fish assemblages are generally considered in isolation from the distribution and abundance of these fish assemblages in adjacent deeper waters. We investigate the abundance and length of demersal fish assemblages across a section of tropical continental shelf at Ningaloo Reef, Western Australia, to identify fish and fish habitat relationships across steep gradients in depth and in different benthic habitat types. The assemblage composition of demersal fish were assessed from baited remote underwater stereo-video samples (n = 304) collected from 16 depth and habitat combinations. Samples were collected across a depth range poorly represented in the literature from the fringing reef lagoon (1–10 m depth), down the fore reef slope to the reef base (10–30 m depth) then across the adjacent continental shelf (30–110 m depth). Multivariate analyses showed that there were distinctive fish assemblages and different sized fish were associated with each habitat/depth category. Species richness, MaxN and diversity declined with depth, while average length and trophic level increased. The assemblage structure, diversity, size and trophic structure of demersal fishes changes from shallow inshore habitats to deeper water habitats. More habitat specialists (unique species per habitat/depth category) were associated with the reef slope and reef base than other habitats, but offshore sponge-dominated habitats and inshore coral-dominated reef also supported unique species. This suggests that marine protected areas in shallow coral-dominated reef habitats may not adequately protect those species whose depth distribution extends beyond shallow habitats, or other significant elements of demersal fish biodiversity. The ontogenetic habitat partitioning which is characteristic of many species, suggests that to maintain entire species life histories it is necessary to protect corridors of connected habitats through which fish can migrate.

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          Fishing down marine food webs

          The mean trophic level of the species groups reported in Food and Agricultural Organization global fisheries statistics declined from 1950 to 1994. This reflects a gradual transition in landings from long-lived, high trophic level, piscivorous bottom fish toward short-lived, low trophic level invertebrates and planktivorous pelagic fish. This effect, also found to be occurring in inland fisheries, is most pronounced in the Northern Hemisphere. Fishing down food webs (that is, at lower trophic levels) leads at first to increasing catches, then to a phase transition associated with stagnating or declining catches. These results indicate that present exploitation patterns are unsustainable.
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            Measuring Biological Diversity

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              Temperature control of larval dispersal and the implications for marine ecology, evolution, and conservation.

              Temperature controls the rate of fundamental biochemical processes and thereby regulates organismal attributes including development rate and survival. The increase in metabolic rate with temperature explains substantial among-species variation in life-history traits, population dynamics, and ecosystem processes. Temperature can also cause variability in metabolic rate within species. Here, we compare the effect of temperature on a key component of marine life cycles among a geographically and taxonomically diverse group of marine fish and invertebrates. Although innumerable lab studies document the negative effect of temperature on larval development time, little is known about the generality versus taxon-dependence of this relationship. We present a unified, parameterized model for the temperature dependence of larval development in marine animals. Because the duration of the larval period is known to influence larval dispersal distance and survival, changes in ocean temperature could have a direct and predictable influence on population connectivity, community structure, and regional-to-global scale patterns of biodiversity.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Editor
                Journal
                PLoS One
                PLoS ONE
                plos
                plosone
                PLoS ONE
                Public Library of Science (San Francisco, USA )
                1932-6203
                2012
                25 June 2012
                : 7
                : 6
                : e39634
                Affiliations
                [1 ]The Oceans Institute and School of Plant Biology, Faculty of Natural and Agricultural Science, The University of Western Australia, Perth, Western Australia, Australia
                [2 ]Oceanwise Environmental Scientists, Perth, Western Australia, Australia
                [3 ]Australian Institute of Marine Science, The Oceans Institute, Perth, Western Australia, Australia
                [4 ]Department of Applied Geology, Curtin University of Technology, Perth, Western Australia, Australia
                Swansea University, United Kingdom
                Author notes

                Conceived and designed the experiments: BF EH. Performed the experiments: BF ET JC AH. Analyzed the data: BF. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: BF EH AH. Wrote the paper: BF EH.

                Article
                PONE-D-12-04623
                10.1371/journal.pone.0039634
                3382469
                22761852
                3ffc43fe-36f7-4627-b596-ec96e42ef8e6
                Fitzpatrick et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
                History
                : 11 February 2012
                : 27 May 2012
                Page count
                Pages: 14
                Categories
                Research Article
                Biology
                Ecology
                Ecological Environments
                Marine Environments
                Ecological Metrics
                Species Diversity
                Marine Ecology
                Coral Reefs
                Biodiversity
                Coastal Ecology
                Conservation Science
                Ecosystems
                Environmental Protection
                Spatial and Landscape Ecology
                Marine Biology
                Coastal Ecology
                Fisheries Science
                Marine Conservation
                Marine Ecology
                Marine Monitoring

                Uncategorized
                Uncategorized

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