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Structural complexity mediates functional structure of reef fish assemblages among coral habitats

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Structural complexity mediates functional structure of reef fish assemblages among coral habitats. / Richardson, Laura; Graham, Nicholas Anthony James; Pratchett, Morgan Stuart et al.
In: Environmental Biology of Fishes, Vol. 100, No. 3, 03.2017, p. 193-207.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Richardson, L, Graham, NAJ, Pratchett, MS & Hoey, AS 2017, 'Structural complexity mediates functional structure of reef fish assemblages among coral habitats', Environmental Biology of Fishes, vol. 100, no. 3, pp. 193-207. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10641-016-0571-0

APA

Richardson, L., Graham, N. A. J., Pratchett, M. S., & Hoey, A. S. (2017). Structural complexity mediates functional structure of reef fish assemblages among coral habitats. Environmental Biology of Fishes, 100(3), 193-207. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10641-016-0571-0

Vancouver

Richardson L, Graham NAJ, Pratchett MS, Hoey AS. Structural complexity mediates functional structure of reef fish assemblages among coral habitats. Environmental Biology of Fishes. 2017 Mar;100(3):193-207. Epub 2017 Jan 7. doi: 10.1007/s10641-016-0571-0

Author

Richardson, Laura ; Graham, Nicholas Anthony James ; Pratchett, Morgan Stuart et al. / Structural complexity mediates functional structure of reef fish assemblages among coral habitats. In: Environmental Biology of Fishes. 2017 ; Vol. 100, No. 3. pp. 193-207.

Bibtex

@article{7cd306516f1640e4805988980e2c3645,
title = "Structural complexity mediates functional structure of reef fish assemblages among coral habitats",
abstract = "Coral community composition varies considerably due to both environmental conditions and disturbance histories. However, the extent to which coral composition influences associated fish assemblages remains largely unknown. Here an ecological trait-based ordination analysis was used to compare functional richness (range of unique trait combinations), functional evenness (weighted distribution of fishes with shared traits), and functional divergence (proportion of total abundance supported by species with traits on the periphery of functional space) of fish assemblages among six distinct coral habitats. Despite no significant variation in species richness among habitats, there were differences in the functional richness and functional divergence, but not functional evenness, of fish assemblages among habitats. Structural complexity of coral assemblages was the best predictor of the differences in functional richness and divergence among habitats. Functional richness of fish assemblages was highest in branching Porites habitats, lowest in Pocillopora and soft coral habitats, and intermediate in massive Porites, staghorn Acropora, and mixed coral habitats. Massive and branching Porites habitats displayed greater functional divergence in fish assemblages than the Pocillopora habitat, whilst the remaining habitats were intermediate. Differences in functional richness and divergence were largely driven by the presence of small schooling planktivores in the massive and branching Porites habitats. These results indicate that differential structural complexity among coral communities may act as an environmental filter, affecting the distribution and abundance of associated species traits, particularly those of small-bodied schooling fishes.",
keywords = "Coral composition, Fish assemblage structure, Functional diversity, Traits, Environmental filtering",
author = "Laura Richardson and Graham, {Nicholas Anthony James} and Pratchett, {Morgan Stuart} and Hoey, {Andrew S.}",
note = "The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10641-016-0571-0",
year = "2017",
month = mar,
doi = "10.1007/s10641-016-0571-0",
language = "English",
volume = "100",
pages = "193--207",
journal = "Environmental Biology of Fishes",
issn = "0378-1909",
publisher = "Springer Netherlands",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Structural complexity mediates functional structure of reef fish assemblages among coral habitats

AU - Richardson, Laura

AU - Graham, Nicholas Anthony James

AU - Pratchett, Morgan Stuart

AU - Hoey, Andrew S.

N1 - The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10641-016-0571-0

PY - 2017/3

Y1 - 2017/3

N2 - Coral community composition varies considerably due to both environmental conditions and disturbance histories. However, the extent to which coral composition influences associated fish assemblages remains largely unknown. Here an ecological trait-based ordination analysis was used to compare functional richness (range of unique trait combinations), functional evenness (weighted distribution of fishes with shared traits), and functional divergence (proportion of total abundance supported by species with traits on the periphery of functional space) of fish assemblages among six distinct coral habitats. Despite no significant variation in species richness among habitats, there were differences in the functional richness and functional divergence, but not functional evenness, of fish assemblages among habitats. Structural complexity of coral assemblages was the best predictor of the differences in functional richness and divergence among habitats. Functional richness of fish assemblages was highest in branching Porites habitats, lowest in Pocillopora and soft coral habitats, and intermediate in massive Porites, staghorn Acropora, and mixed coral habitats. Massive and branching Porites habitats displayed greater functional divergence in fish assemblages than the Pocillopora habitat, whilst the remaining habitats were intermediate. Differences in functional richness and divergence were largely driven by the presence of small schooling planktivores in the massive and branching Porites habitats. These results indicate that differential structural complexity among coral communities may act as an environmental filter, affecting the distribution and abundance of associated species traits, particularly those of small-bodied schooling fishes.

AB - Coral community composition varies considerably due to both environmental conditions and disturbance histories. However, the extent to which coral composition influences associated fish assemblages remains largely unknown. Here an ecological trait-based ordination analysis was used to compare functional richness (range of unique trait combinations), functional evenness (weighted distribution of fishes with shared traits), and functional divergence (proportion of total abundance supported by species with traits on the periphery of functional space) of fish assemblages among six distinct coral habitats. Despite no significant variation in species richness among habitats, there were differences in the functional richness and functional divergence, but not functional evenness, of fish assemblages among habitats. Structural complexity of coral assemblages was the best predictor of the differences in functional richness and divergence among habitats. Functional richness of fish assemblages was highest in branching Porites habitats, lowest in Pocillopora and soft coral habitats, and intermediate in massive Porites, staghorn Acropora, and mixed coral habitats. Massive and branching Porites habitats displayed greater functional divergence in fish assemblages than the Pocillopora habitat, whilst the remaining habitats were intermediate. Differences in functional richness and divergence were largely driven by the presence of small schooling planktivores in the massive and branching Porites habitats. These results indicate that differential structural complexity among coral communities may act as an environmental filter, affecting the distribution and abundance of associated species traits, particularly those of small-bodied schooling fishes.

KW - Coral composition

KW - Fish assemblage structure

KW - Functional diversity

KW - Traits

KW - Environmental filtering

U2 - 10.1007/s10641-016-0571-0

DO - 10.1007/s10641-016-0571-0

M3 - Journal article

VL - 100

SP - 193

EP - 207

JO - Environmental Biology of Fishes

JF - Environmental Biology of Fishes

SN - 0378-1909

IS - 3

ER -