Abstract
Taxa that alter the morphology of foundation species have the potential to indirectly affect organisms that use the foundation species for habitat. On tropical reefs, coral morphology can be altered by epibiotic symbionts, potentially affecting fish populations that use coral as refuge. In the lagoons of Moorea, French Polynesia, mutualistic gammarid amphipods and chaetopterid polychaetes induce the growth of branch-like ‘fingers’ on corals of the genus Montipora . I tested whether these fingers create habitat for reef fish, and found that juvenile and adult fish sheltered and larvae settled among fingers on both natural and experimental reefs. While the habitat structure induced by the mutualists appears to be of lower quality than that provided by branching corals such as Pocillopora sp., the presence of these structures in areas of the reef devoid of branching corals likely means that mutualist-induced structures increase the abundance and diversity of reef fish at the landscape scale.
Original language | American English |
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Journal | Marine Ecology Progress Series |
Volume | 451 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Apr 11 2012 |
Keywords
- Coral morphology
- Facilitation cascade
- Fish recruitment
- Gammarid amphipod
- Habitat complexity
- Montipora
- Mutualism
- Trait-mediated indirect interaction
Disciplines
- Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
- Marine Biology